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I Beat...
I N~w Haven moving:i!;· · ~;:==·&lt;=2;;;;:::~~·1 Fund moving toward $15,000
:; · Ca/e-nda.r :i
I Of the Bend
... / I ah eaa £Or Sewers
5
I

I

@:

~
'· -· ~II

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I

·

By Bob Hoef/h·h

-

Like e\erythmg else, lumber ts sutrce llwse dcl \'S -- and
expenstve
Seth Nicholson of Rutland camC' .1ct ossa statement hom lht•
JohnS DaVIes and Sons Lumber Co dated Au~ 7 1888 pomtmg
up the "'ay cost s have n sen
The btll totaled $74 98 for 100 feet of floonng, $1 . 400 feet of
ce1ltng, $10 , 700 feet cetltng lumber $17 50 900 feet, ce1ltng,
$25 20. tluee doors at $1 !llJ each for a total of $5 40 one dom at
$2 30 a door at $1 98 and stx wmdows at $1 6() each
An unusual aspec t of the s 1tuat10n IS that the btll Y.as made
out to Seth Nicholson two years before he was born, mstead of m
the name of NH:holson's grandfather who ordered the lw11be1 -

Phtltp W Ntcholson. It's believed that the company got the ftrst
name of Ntcholson mtxed \\tlh that of a nctghbor, Setl1 Pa10e
NURSERYMAN GEORGE CARPER was working at the
new Second St drtve-m faciltty of the Pomeroy Natwnal Bank
the other day plantmg some beauttful trees He left for lunch and
1eturned to f10d l}mg about for plant10g, a nwnber of sorrowful
lookmg seedlmgs pulled from the hillstde nearby
The staff of the Pomeroy Post Offtce enJoyed a,e surpnse
Ca rper regtstered when he returned Some say, the post office
group are the ones \\ho placed the seedl10gs at the stle I dunno
SEVERAL MEIGS Counttans are named 10 the safet} honm
roll of the General Telephone Company's current employes
pubhcatton They are Don A Sptres, Pomeroy, a 10 year safety
record, and Lawrence Diddle, Pomeroy, and Bobbie E Hoy,
Racme, f1ve years each
MANY RACES and creeds have gone mto the makmg of our
American Hentage

By destgnatmg February as Amertcan Htstory Month,
Return Jonathan Chapter of the Daughters of the Amertcan
Revolution, urges you to rcchsCO\ier our e xcitmg past Relive the
patnotlsrn of our heroes and heromes, of all races, and tt JUSt
mtght help u.s to apprectale our country and each othet more, the
D ,\ R pomts out.
MRS EVELYN B Thomas, Leading Creek Road, should
have "gobs" of love for the U S Navy Her children are both
servmg Thetr addresses are SH2 Paul F Thomas, USS Puget
Sounds (AD38), m care of FPO, New York, NY, 09501, and SN
Jane Thomas, 280587591, DA Class 74 14 BCSS, CSTSC, Mare
Island, ValleJo, Caltf , 94592

Coin chili will meet W ed.nesday
The OH KAN Com Club wtll
conduct a regular busmess
meeting Wednesday evemng m
the meeting rooms of the
Columbus and Southern Ohw
Electrtc Compan1, Mtll Street,
Mtddleport
A soctal hour and tradmg
sesston startmg at 7 p m
precedes the meetmg, and outof-town com dealers wtll be
present to buy, sell, and trade
collectmg matenal Jeffrey
Whtte, past prestdent of the

Hockmg Valley Com Club,
Athens, will be the guest
speaker. tal ktn g on "Co tn
Investmg ''
Members "'1ll wrap up their
planmng for the btggest com
show held locally; set for
March 31, at the Holtday Inn,
Galltpolts, Ohto A com auctton
wtll follow the meeting, and
refreshments wtll be served.
All tnlerested ctltzens are
mvtted to attend the evcmng 's
activities

Elwood Lieving dies on Monday
MASON
Elwood J
L1evrng, 90, of Kirkland, Ill
d1ed Monday rn the DeKalb
Publrc Hosp rtal , Krrkland Ill
He was born on May 28 1883 rn
Mason County son of the late
Henry and El1zabeth Yonker
Lrevmg Mr l1evmg lrved 1n
Mason County several years
H1s w rfe , Luella Be lle Lrev1ng
died Apnl 1 \965
Survrvrng are three sons ,
Carl L•evrng, Pt
Pleasant
Bernard Lrev1ng New Haven
Dona ld Lrevrng
Waterman
ll lrno1s, s1x daughters Mrs
Opal Capehart, Mrs Wilma
Rou sh both of New Haven
Mrs Alrce L1evmg Mason ,
Mrs Wrlda Brmker, Kingston
Ill
Mrs Catherme Holmes
Marron,
Ill ,
Mrs
Ada
Oldaker Kirkland Ill Also
surv1v1ng are numerous grand,

gre at and great great g rand
c hrldre n
The fun era l writ be he ld at
th e Fogles ong Funeral Home
on Fr rday at 1 30 p m wrth the
Rev e rend J Will1am De Mos:.
offrc ratmg Bunal w rll be rn
Union Cemetery Ca llrng hours
are between 2 and 4 and 7 to 9
p m Thursday at Foglesong
Funeral Home

VISITS RELATIVES
Mrs. Glenn McDonald,
Morgantown, W Va , was the
weekend guest of Mrs Russ
Watson and other relatiVes m
the Bend area

Our Favorite Word is

IIIII

•••••

:~:

Feb 27, QUiltmg , C rafl~

Th• fund drr ve o t th e Mtd
dlf'por t Frrc Or&gt;p,l rlm e nt lor a
ne w cmcrqr ncy .1mbul ance rs
movrnq tow.1rd the $ 1 ~ 000
g0 ,1 t

Robe rt S Pa rk e r, Mr .:tnd Mr5
Millard Wtldermulh Browns
Wrgs and Accessones Mr and

Co
Ellr o;; and Sam. Sohro
Htndy
ECicc t r rcd Sa lm o~s
Lum ber
o
an
pence r 5

Mr.-., Norman Humphre{S Mr

Market

r

l

Yes were a full Serv1ce

Ba nk a nd ready to hel p you w1th all yo u r bank
1ng needs fro m pa ss book and c ertifi ca te sav
1ngs to chec k1 ng accounts

cashier checks

mocey orders trave lers c hec ks depo s1t boxes.
loans of all types and fnendly se rv 1ce

WHEN YOU VISIT, PARK FRU Auto Teller Wtndow and Walk-Up Wmdow
Open Frtday Evenmgs S to 7 p. m.

•

....C.CINCINNATI

President

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Middleport

•

at y

..___ELBERFELD$ _

11~

Save 10 to 25%

MEIGS THEATRE
Wall Orsney's
"THAT DARN CAT"
(Techmcolor)
Haley Mdts
Dean Jone s
Also
Dr sney Cartoon
GOOFY'S GUCER

Reuter-Brogan
Insurance SeiVices

Phone 992-5130
107 Sycamore

Pomeroy

Show starts 7 p m
Wedne sday &amp; Thursday
Feb 27 28
NOT OPEN

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I

Devoted To The lntere.•L• Of The

VOL. XXV NO 222

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Pomeroy Cement Block, Co.
The Department Store of Building Since 1915

CEILING TILE

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POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

purchases to $2 and $3
Kunnen satd that Mtbl, Texaco, Marathon, Unton 7f&gt; and
Sunoco have been the hardest ht t by the gasoline shortages He
estimated that 50 to 65 per cent of 400 assoc ia tiOn statwns m
Hamtlton, Butler, Warren and Clermont c ount1e s are now
hmtttn g sales.
Art B1dlingmeyer, owner of a Mobtl statton 10 Pnce Hill . a
suburb of Cmcmnati, who has been out of gasoline smce F eb 19,
sa td the sta te has granted hts requ est for addtttonal gasoline but
added "now I can't get tl from the company "
" You've got to go through so much red tape , 1t's not worth 1t t (;
ask for ex tra gas," satd Casey Ernst, owner of a Te xaco st.aiJcm
m another Cmcmnat1 suburb
Kunnen esttmated that 140 out of 1,500 dealers 10 the Greater
Cmcmnat1 Area have gone out of busmess m the la st 11 m o nt hs
"Its no wonder," he satd, "but what do you do when thts has
been your busmess all your hfe "

•

enttne
Me~s-Mason

Area

WEDN ESDAY. FEBRUARY 27, 1974

PHONE 992 2156

TEN CENTS

Two plead guilty in cow's killing

......---1

Dots with
downright
dash

LARRY BROGAN
EDNA SCHOENLEB
GERALD REUTER

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal D~~~sit Insurance Corporation

Cresente smd he expected only a few more closmg:-:; m the next
two days before dealers beg m recmvmg the1r Mar ch allot.mcnl"i
Ht&gt; scud m January, only about 125 stat1ons ran out of gas
before the end of the month and blamed the mc1 eased dosm gs on
lower fuel allotments
Thts month, dealers averaged about 85 per cent of the~r allotments, down about f1ve per cent
Crese nte sa1d to prevent gas pump d.ryups the associatiOn has
recommended to tis 1,900 members that they shm ten hours for
selhng gasohne and also close another day besides Sunday
Cresentesatd the esltmated 225 company-&lt;lwned sl&lt;l ttons tn the
Cleveland area have not rut) out of gasohne
''Either they allocate better than we 01 Uie} get more gasolme." he said
Stations Um1tmg Purchases
M1ke Kunnen, president of the Greater Cmcmna lt Gasohne
Dealers Assoctallon, satd numerous s tahom; have been hnntmg

I

in burley vote

PITTSBURGH

lJibens ~aUoru~l B hk

I

He said ga.Sohne allotments to dealer stations are hased on1972
sales. Currently gasoline supply ts rangmg from 70 to 88 per cent
of the 1972 sales, depending on the gasohne company.
Stein also said oil comparues, under the same new federal

regulattons, are allowed to mcrease prtces to the dealer Frtday
Prevtously, those mcreases could be made anyltme durutg the
ftrst 10 days of the month, Stem satd
Now the mcrease must be made on thehrstday of the month or
postponed until the next month, Stein said.
Request Changed
Stem satd the dealers assoctation at ftrst requested a shdmg
scale adJustment due to the decrease m gas allotments.
However, due to the nuctuating supply of gasohne the slidmg
scale was abaildoned and the two cent mcrease was recommended and approved, Stem satd.
James V Cresente. Cleveland, executtve dtrector of the Northern Ohto Petroleum Retatlers Assoctatlon, said that although the
250 statlons m Northern Ohio had to close there was no need for
pamc.
'No one we know of so far has not been able to get gas," he
satd

~ne

Ballots mailed

Personal!

SERVICE

crease.

\

•

zo gaso

By Unlred Press International
The price of gasolme at most Ohw stattons wtll mcrease by at
least two cents a gallon Frtday. So far about 250 stations m
northern Ohio have closed because of limited fuel allocations and
stations in the Greater GnciMah area arc restricting sales.
In addition, 214 Certifted gasolme stations, 195 of them in Ohto,
will be closed today in a previoosly announced cuthack
Gene Srem, director of the Central Ohio Gasoline Dealers
Association, Sllid today new federal regulations allow dealer
stations to raise thetr prices two cents a gallon on March 1 to
compensare for the lack of supply
Stein said company owned stahons are not penrutted the m-

lh

F~nd Mrs R G Ba 1iey Kyg er
F rr ~men s 1r ess
a 1 no
NEW HAVEN. W Va - A s tructton and also a motion fur
Feb 28, Rirthday Party 1-'1
Ld li•'&gt; l contnbuiors to th e Lad res A td Mr and Mr s (a ss
con tnbu l ron rs too s mal l for th e
report on plans to construct the a pre-application to be made to pIll
&lt;JrtV I rl f (' Chi'l rl eSrlnd Gertrud e Htndy Cr~rne Moore, Or sa bled
l und Prr ve but dto ask that
New Haven secondar) sewer
the Environmental Protectwn
March 1, 13ow llnl-! 1 3 p m
V.1n Coone y Mr and Mrs.
Ame n ca n Veterans Au)(i li ary
donation:. be rna e as soo n as
Lcslr c Srdcrs
Ca r o l o nd Mr c1 nd Mrs Rona ld Mu llrn s
possrble so tha t the dnve ca n
t1 eHtmen l plant tn g hl1 g hted
Agenc y fo1 the plant was
Ju.Jm
ta
Bach
tel
Mr
s
John
Mr
and
Mr
s
Ed
Sid
es
be
wrapped up Donation s may
town c ounc il meetmg Monday passed
Bielke
Steve and Vr c kr e Cla r abe ll Smrth , Mr and Mrs
be le lt at th e frr e s tat10n or
mght
Otheractton taken by council
Ho uc h rnc, Dnv rd and Evalee Leo na r d Van Mete r Sr Mr s
mail ed to th e de pa rtment at
Wol le Vrolf'l BroNn Ne llie H
H 0
Ewmg T E Mor rrs,
PO Box 144 m Mrddlepo rt
Sewer Commissioner Da v1d was the approv a l of pu1 chase
Trrt
ry
V
E
a
nd
Bemr
ce
Mary
E
Bac
on
Bu
s
y
Bee
Simon ton gave council the of a tra1ler for th e newly of Ma~on i~ tkad
Ne lson
Mr and Mr s
Ed Class of Mrddl epo r t Fir s t
teport
then wtroduced purchased D1tch·Wtlr h and
Tt_wksiJury Allen D Brs hop
Bapll s t
Ch u r ch
Ward
CHILD BAPTIZED
MA SON W V,1
Mrs
representativ es of th e Ap- approval to donate $2,000 of
Mr and Mr s
Dw rght R
Nr c ho ls.o n
Mr
a nd M rs
Be rth a L
Sc h rre ber
H6
Jonathan
Rtchard Vamca,
W,;tllilce, Dultoi'Y&gt;'Drrg e Co Mr
Ge rald Mmor Mr and Mr s E
pala c hian Power Compan)
re\oenue shanng funds to the M,Ho n
d1ed Monday a t and Mr s Ma nnrng We bs ter
P Ander son Mr ond Mr s
the son of Mr and Mrs Peter
George Han·e}
R1chard New
Haven
Re c rcatton Vc te r(1ns Me m or ra l Ho:. plial
Jolly Bunch Sewr ng C l ub
Ralph Mac umbe r , Mr and
J
Vamca , Geneva , SwitNorthup, Fred Helm and Mac Foundatwn to purchase lolloNrng r~ one week s Illness M d dl e p o rt
E le m e ntary Mr s E C J o rd on Mr and
Mr
c-,
Sc
hrerbe
r
was
born
a
t
zerland
, was baptized Ftrday
McMahan, who expressed their propel ty from Pete Roush on Allred 1n Me rgs Cou nt y th e Sc hool Earre Wood , Ha r o ld Mrs Nea l Jeffer s Mr and
Go ld1 e Carson Allred and Mrs Worley Oavr s, Mr nnd
evenmg, Feb 22, at the Forest
good fatth and mterest wtlh the 4th Street adJacent to property daught e r of the la t e John and .1End
unr ce Du ff Lrnco ln W Sm ith
Mrs Arran Nelson Mr s Nellie
town on the secondary sewer
now owned by the foundatwn Angel1ne Lew 1s Bent7 She Ted Lo ng st re th E llr s a nd Son s Ne lson Mr and Mrs J rm my Run Umted Methodtst Church
Rev Jay Hanke performed the
attended the Mac;o n Un1le d Sohro Mr r~nd Mr s Gene Hobbs Mr and Mrs J R
plant
w1th
the
AEP
Dave F1eld, concerned New
Method1c;t Chur c h and had
Norton Lawr e nce and Ca rl a H..1ndl e y Mr and Mrs Harold
ntes of bapttsm Attendmg was
1ep resenl&lt;l ttves donattng $5,750 Haven Citizen, appeared before been a res rdcnt o l Ma son the Wrn
c br c nn c r
Co lumbu s
Rrce, F lorence Row e. th e
the
tmmcdtate famtly of Mrs
f01 a prehrmnary study of council to dtscuss speedmg pas t 10 yea r s She rs su rvrve d Sh rh;y dnd G r ace Wolf e, E le ct a Crr cle of t he Mrddl eport
Van1ca
and a number of
by
two
nep
hews
Walte
r
Benl1
Phase I and If for the con- WI thm the City and suggested to of Pome r oy and Clare E M1ddleport Busrness a nd F1rs t Bapt1st Church John
Pro fess rona l Wom en s Club
Dr II. Mr and Mrs Dale J acobs
s tructiOn
The offer v.a s
counctl tha t the 30 mtle He n I1 of On ley Ill a r11 ecc. Spe ncers Mnr ke t Mr an d Mrs Mr and Mrs Wrllra m Cr rner , frtend s Master Vamca ts the
grand son of Mrs Olan
Juanilr~
Fr s he r of
unanimously accepted wlth per hour s1gn be moved up Rt Mr s
John Shee ts James Mill er ,
Genhetmer,
Forest Run. Hts
Cres
tlr
ne
a
n
d
thre
e
grea
t
Vrck1e Wenkle Alex Halley ,
plans made to meet aga m wtth
1.1 to the New Haven cor· nrC'C f&gt;S
An
sell E
Ba1ley, Phyll1 s
grandfathe r, Rtchard Vamca,
the group after the study to porat10n l1ne Council w1ll
Prcced1ng her rn deat h were
Sheet s Trllle Sheets, Che n
Bay Vtllage , was also tn at·
d1scuss further progress
check mlo the matter "tlh the a tw rn s rs ler, Bess 1e 10 1972
Thoma s, Lon Thomas ( hel"y l
tendance The Rev and Mrs
ano
th
er
s
rs
le
r
a
nd
three
Folmer E D Salmons R H
Representatives of the VTN State Htghway department and
broth e r s
Hanke
and two chtldren of
Fraley
Dan 1e l McCloud
Engmeertng ftrm of South report later
F unera l se r v1ces w 1ll be he ld
Darell Sellers Homebuilde r s
V1enna, Va , are close fnends
Charleston were present and a
Attend10g were Mayor John ill 1 p m Thurs day at th e Whrle
Ballots ha ve been matled to Class of the Middleport Church of the Vamcas and they and
F
uneral
Hom
e
rn
Coolv
rll
e
wrth
motiOn was approved by 1 horne, councilman John
all known ehgtblc voters tn the of Chr1st Women of the Heat h
Rev
Roy De e te r of
Rtchard Vantca were guests
Unrted Methodrst Church and
counct) to s 1gn an agreement Roush , Charles Smtih, Davtd trthe
burle} tobacco marketmg Mr and Mrs Harold Loh se
c rat1ng Bu r ra l wrll be 1n th e
several days of Mrs Olan
wtth the firm for engmeermg Stmonton, Wayne Carder.
Be ntl Ce m e tery a t Allred
quota refernedum To be
The la tes t bus1ness houses to
Genhetmer and Mrs Russ
Frre
nd
s
may
c
all
at
th
e
fun
era
l
serv1ces for the plant con- Harold Moxley anti recorder
ehgtble to vote a person must contribut e are Brown's Wrgs
home anytrme after noo n
and
Access
orres,
Dutton
Drug
Watson
Jane Russell.
have an mterest m burley
Wedne sday
Also present were New
tobacco marketed m 1973 or
Haven ftremen, Cecil Duncan,
have had thetr tobacco htstory
El L. Ford dies
Thomas Grmstead and Btll
preserved
\ Con ttnued from page 1I
E
L (Lo r y) Ford 79,
Any burley tobacco grower
Hoc krngport d red Monday a t
after he got approval from an James.
th
e
Krmes
Convalescent
Cen
te
r
or
anyone havmg an mterest
Shop Weekdays 9:30 to 5 pm
unnamed Whtte House rude
rn Ath e ns fol low rng an ex
may
call
at
the
Me1gs
County
"Ambassadorshtps have not
te nded rllness
~-been for sale, to my knowledMr
Ford was born rn ASCS Offtce 10 Pomeroy and
Ravenswood,
W
Va,
th
e
s
on
of
recetve
a
ballot.
The
ge," Ntxon satd
"Am(Contmued from page I)
th e late Mont a nd Mar y
bas,adorshtps cannot be words, the vtllage would have Claw so n Ford He wa s a referendum ts for a pertod of
purchased I would not approve had to provide the enttre membe r of the Hoc krngport three years A "yes" vote 1s for
any ambassador unless the $15,000 needed for the new Un1f ed Me thodr s t Church and mamtammg quotas and a "no"
had s pent the greater par t of vote ts for ehmmattng quotas.
man or woman was quahftedvehtcle from the revenue h1s l1fe rn the Belpre and
Tobacco quotas for 1974 were
clearly apart from any con- shar10g fund.
Hoc ki ngport areas
Su
rv
rvrng
ar
e
two
da
ughters
by approxtmately 8
mcreased
tnbutton.' '
Councilman James Brewer Mr s C D ( Mildred ) Leeson
Says Crisis Is Over
reported on the proposal to rent Pnlm e tla Fl a , and Mr s John pet due to demand for tobacco
Nixon, choosmg hts words a pohce crmser rather than ( Mary } Coen , Hockrngport ,
wtth great care, began wtlh an buymg one outnght He satd lour son s Robert of Belpr e
opentng statement on the that Potnt Pleasant had and Carl Ja m es and Ha rold
a ll of Hockrngport two srsters,
CALLED BY DEATH
energy crtsts, predtctmg that recently purchased a ney, Mrs Maud Saf r eed of Lake
Mr. and Mrs Ron Cheadle,
the long hoes leadtng to police vehtcle but plans also to Worthy Fl a a nd Mr ~ Abbre
Nutte
r
of
Ma
~s1
llon
two
and James, Columbus ,
Charles
gasohne stattons would grow rent another one later Grate
brother s Ken na G lendale, Mrs
Dorothy Graham,
shorter thts sprmg and sum- satd a ftnn contacted by letter Calrf and Char les Arl rngton,
mer, that raltoning would on the detatls of pohce crutser Va 22 grandc hild ren and Wtlhamstown, W Va , Mrs.
seven n 1ece s and nephews
Conme Searles, Alhance, Leo
prove unnecessary but that rentals has not yet replied
Precedmg
him
m
dea
th
were
Searles,
Columbus, Mr and
gasohne pr1ces would remam
Counctlman Marvm Kelly hr s l1rs t wrfe, th e form e r Lulu Mrs. Robert Eilts and
htgh
reported on the status of 10· Crow rn 1931 and hr s second daughter, Springfield, Mr. and
wtfe the form er He len Swan,
surance, rev1ewmg aspects of rn 1969
a daughte r
two Mrs Alan Rage! and famtly ,
CASE TRANSFERRED
pohctes now tn force
He bro the r s, and a srs te r
Funeral s ervr ces w1 ll be at 1 Loogootee, Ill , and Mr and
The case of Arnold Byrge , quesltoned also the legahty of
m Thurs day a t the Wh 1te Mrs Denms Bueker, Stgel, Ill ,
charged wtth takmg and the muffler systems of some pFuneral
Home 1n Coo lv rl le wllh were called here by the death
slaughtermg a cow belongmg vehicles be10g dnven 10 the the Rev Roy W Rose of of thetr grandfather, Archie
to Arthur Hess, has been trans- commumty and was assured frcralmg Burr a l wdl be rn Ellts, Cheshtre
Rockland Cemetery Frre nds
ferred from the Metgs County by Chtef of Pollee J J may
ca ll a t the funeral hom e
Court to the Metgs County Cremeans that checks are after noon We dnesday
Court of Common Pleas
bemg made Brewer dtscussed
LEAVES AREA
water stand10g m dttches on
Sgt. Davtd N. Mora left from
Beech and Oltver Sts and the
DIVORCE GRANTED
ONE BAPTIZED
the Columbus Atrport Sunday
Mary Ellen Mtller has been posstbtltty of gett10g an old
One person, Miss Patncut for San Franctsco, Caltf. ,
awarded a dtvorce m Metgs house on Oliver St. razed. Ann Ftlch, was baptized by where he departed Monday for
County Common Pleas Court Counctl wtll10ves1tgate further Lo•en Stephens, mtmster at the Ubon, Thatland, for a year's
from Harry A Miller on the the latter matter
Weststde Church of Chrtst, tour of duty Sgt Mora, in his
Counctl agreed to enter 10to Sunday lollowmg the mormng thtrd year of enhstment wtth
grounds of gross neglect or
an agreement wtth the Rtch worshtp servtee John Ray the U S Atr Force, served 10
dulj and extreme cruelly
Valley Datry on pay10g one- Hunnell also was recently Thatland for stx months last
half of the cost 10volved each gtven the rttes of baptism at year. He was accompanied to
month
to tnstall a dusk to dawn the church rather than John the atrport by hts parents, Mr.
DIVORCE ASKED
Renee M Coursey, Rt 3, light on the vtllage storage Ray Stobart as was reported and Mrs Donald Mora, Mark
Pomeroy, has ftled for a garage on Gravel Htll Plans
and Mary, followmg a 2Q.{Iay
dtvorce from Walton J were discussed on repairing or
leave
Coursey, M10ersvtlle, on the tmproving the road to the pool
Right at the top of the vest-dressed list
Lady
PLEASANT VALLEY
grounds of gross neglect of m the communtty park.
Laura's delightfully dotty slep.in shortdress with
Denms Saelens appeared
DISCHARGES
Randy
duty and extreme cruelty.
VISIT POMEROY
before counctl to dtscuss Stmpktns, Mason; Myrtle
stretchy shirred cuffs, soft self lie belt '" Arne!
Mr and Mrs. Wtlham R
damages
mcurred
to
hiS car Kelly, Leon, Katie Mayes,
1ersey. Card1gan-vested in dot-trimmed solid polyester
BOND FORFEITED
Shertdan, Jr., and Marta, Amta
last
November
when
hts
Pomt
Pleasant;
Ida
Putney,
Robert E Getz, 50, Racine,
double ln1l, All machine washable/dryable.
and Chrtsl10a, Waverly, were
vehtcle
struck
a
ratsed
Point
Pleasant;
Grato
Ward,
forfetted a $200 bond tn
Navy/Red. !21f2-221f2
weekend guests of Mr. and
Syracuse Mayor Herman manhole section at the 10- Vmton
BIRTHS - Feb. 24, a Mrs. Wtlham J Shertdan, Sr ,
London's Court Monday mght tersection of Locust and Pearl
Pomeroy, and Mrs Olan
on charges of operat10g a Sts. Saelens satd the cover daughter to Mr and Mrs. Murl
Genheimer,
Forest Run
stopped
hts
car
completely
and
Kigg10s, Galhpolts Ferry
motor vehicle whtle under the
10!1uence of alcohol. Getz was hts head was rammed through
ctted by Pohce Chtef Mtltton the w10dshteld He charged
that the area of the ratsed
Varian
cover should have been
marked wtth warmng stgnal
Sealens satd his car was a total
SQUAD CALLED
The Mtddleport ER squad loss as a result of the accident
was called Monday at 5 54 p m. The value, he stated, was set at
for Glenna little, Pearl St , $300.
Counctl dtscussed the matter
who suffered a laceratton over
with
Saelens but some satd that
her eye when she fell at home.
She was taken to Veterans if the vtllage accepted the
responstbility of damages, tl
Memortal Hospttal
would be responsible for such
thmgs as posstble damages as
the result of autos httting
chuckholes 10 the town Some
chuck holes, they satd, are as
deep as the manhole cover was
htgh at the ltme of the acctdent.
By combmrng your Auto
However
, the matter was
and
Homeowners
Insurance mto ONE policy
referred to the safety com.
WHITE 12" X 12"
mtttee whtch wtll tnvesltgate.
You may be able to
Attend10g the mee ling were
Mayor
Zerkle,
Counctl
Members Hoffman, Kelly,
PEBBLED 12" x 12"
Jenkins and Brewer, Clerkon your yearly rnsurance
Treasurer Grate, Harold
EA.
premtums.
Chase, maintenance supervtsor, Saelens and Chtef
FULL CARTONS ONLY
Cremeans
We will revrew your
AT THIS PRICE
insurance
program
Removes scratches
with you free of
scuffs and sta1ns from
charge any day of the
paneling, furnrture and
woodwork
week
TONIGHT ONLY
Call or slop
Fob 26
and see us.

•

ost

8 - The D&lt;11h Sent mel, Mu1dlt&gt;t&gt;ort -Pomcroy, 0. Feb 1h. 1974

NEW CARRIER for The Dally Sentinel In Syraewte Is
Tim Imboden, age 12, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank lm·
boden. Tun is a seventh grade puptl at Racme Junior High.
His favortte sport ts football an1 his favortte hobby is
assembling models. lie has five sisters and one brothc'l'. He
plans to buy a tape recorder from hts earmngs

•

Kenneth A Mohler, 34,
Middleport, and Arnold Byrge,
'S/,1\t 2, Rac10e, have pleoded
god ty to charges !tied tn the
Feb. 10 killtng of a cow from
the Arthur Hess restdence on
Leadmg Creek Rd.
The cow, which was killed,
was shot 10 the barn and
dragged to the road where tl
was left
Mohler pleaded gutlty before
Common Pleas Judge John C
Bacon on Feb. 2:1, whtle Byrge
pleaded guilty in a Feb 25
appearance before probate and
juvenile court judge Mannmg
Webster on charges of "obtatmng and exerting control
over satd property wtthout the
consent of Arthur Hess or an1

•

No relief seen zn
rising food coStS
WASHING'roN (UPI) -The
cost of a typical household
grocery basket, which set a
new record m January, wtll
push on to more new peaks this
spring and sununer, govern·
men! economists predict.
· The January market hasket
estimate was calculated by
Agriculture Department ex·
perts Tuesday while bakers
descended on t.he Capitol to
publicize thetr claim that
consumers could run out of
bread temporarily this sprmg
unless the government slows
down wheat exports
Agriculture Secretary Earl
L. Butz heatedly derued the

bakers' charges.
Accordmg to agriculture experts, the annual-rate cost of a
market basket of farm-produced food for a "household"
of 3 2 persons rose 1.8 per cent
from $1,650 in December to a
record $1,680 10 January
because of sharp mcreases 10
farm prices.
One department economtst
satd consumers should be
bracmg themselves for sttll
higher prices m the months
ahead because "prtces of
pracltcally
all
major
ca tegortes of food wtll be mcreastng, reflectmg tightenmg
suppbes, higher farm prtces,

.,
ews•• zn
~

By Unlred Press lnternallonal

PARIS - THE GOVERNMENT OF PREMIER Pierre
Messmer resigned today. Education Mmtster Joseph Fontanet
announced that Messmer handed in the restgnation to Prestdent
Georges Pompidou at the weekly cabinet sess10n. The 22-rnan
cabmet has been m power since April 5, !973, when tt was formed
afrer the general electton.
Although Messmer has come under ftre from hts polittcal
opponents recently for lacing style and drive in government, the
restgnation was a surprise Information Mintsrer Jean-Philippe
Lecat said· "Prestdent Pomptdou has accepted U1e restgnation
of the goverrunent." Polittcal sources satd Pompidou wtll now
name a new appointee to the premier's post. His task will be to
form a new council of ministers, or cabmet.
SAN FRANCIS&lt;XJ - THE FBI SAYS IT DOESN'T know
where ktdnaped heiress Patrtcia Hearst is being held, and the 100
agents on the case aren't trying toftnd her. Charles W. Bates, the
agent in charge of the investtgation, told newsmen after a twohour meeting with Miss Hearst's father, publish.er Randolph A.
Hearst, and his family Tuesday night tlult the FBI was still being
very careful. "We don't intend to take any action to try to find
O.t, because this could provoke some actton on the part of t.he
people wbo are holding her."
Bares' statement came as the anguished family waited for
word from the kidnapers and the organizers of a free food
glveoway tried to get a second distrtbution orgamzed. But Gov
Ronald Reagan urged Califormans not to take the free food
demanded by the abductors, saymg those who did were "aiding
and abetting lawlessness."·
DAMASCUS -

SECRETARY OF STATE Henry A.

Kissinger met with President Hafez Assad twtce thiS morning in

fast-paced talks aimed at getting Syna and Israel to open troop
pullback negotiations.
Goverrunent sources said Kissinger and Assad conferred
from midnight until 3:40a.m. and then met agam at 9:30a.m
during the active, first stop of the secretary's fourth Mtddle East
peace mission. After the first meeting American offictals
described Kissinger as "cheerful."
LONDON - THE PRICE OF GOLD RESUMED tis upward
surge on the btg London bullion market today, opening at $177 :;o

an ounce.
Gold first broke through t.he $175 barrter Tuesday m an
UI!Checked splurge of speculation, I'ISing to past $188 before
(Continued on page 8l

and rts10g costs of processmg,
transportmg and dtstrtbuting
food products "
For the months from
January through March, retail
food prices are expected to
average 5 per cent above the
last three months of 1973.
Agrtculture experts say they
believe most of this year's
price hikes will be packed mto
the first SIX months, wtth a
levelling off posstble in the
sununer and some downturn
late iP the year If crop and
livestock productton rtses as
expected.
Even wtth the predtcted
production gains, however, department economists have predicted that average retail food
prtces for all of 1974 will
average between 8 and 16 per
cent above 1973, probably 12
per cent above.
Leadmg a group of bakers to
Capttol Hill Tuesday, Robert J.
Wager, president of the Amert·
can Bakers Assoctation, satd
that "unless swift actton ts
taken, Amertcan consumers
face the grun prospect of a
bread shortage t.hts sprmg and
our mdustry may go over the
brmk to econonuc ruin "

The bakers say the admtrustration ts allowmg too much
wheat to be exported. Sen.
Henry M. Jackson, D-Wash.,
Tuesday supported the bakers
In Indianapolis, Ind., ' Butz
replied to Jackson: "l simply
cannot understand the senator
from the third most Important
wheat stare 10 the nation
turrung hts back on hts constituents m favor of a group of
demonstrating bakers . "

Subsidy received
The three local school
dtstrtets of Metgs County
recetved $193,888 53 In state
school foundatton subsidy
payments after deducltons,
according to a report by Stare
Audttor Joseph T Ferguson for
the month of February
Deductions are for baste and
transportations, employes' and
teacher
retirement, and
allotments to the county board.
Amounts recetved by each
dtstrict after deductions are
Eastern, $36,872.22; Metgs
$114,362.01,
and
Local,
Sout!tl.rn Local, $42,654.30. The
county board of educatton also
recetved a 11irect allotment of
~.468

other person authortzed to give
consent, things of the value of
more than $150 "
The , charges were !tied by
Meigs County Shenff Robert c
Hartenba-ch, and Prosecutmg
Attorney Bernard V. Fultz
pr..,led state's evtdence
In other Shert!f's Dept
action, Betty Sue Tate, 49,
Belpre, was arrested at lla.m
Tuesday whtle drlv10g under
the mfluence of alcohol and
wtt.hout a license She was
released on $400 bond
Two accidents were Investigated
by
depultes
Tuesday. At 4 p m. m Ohve
Twp., Bruce L. Fleming, 17,
Columbus, was traveltng on CR
46, Success Rd , when he fell

asleep at the wheel The auto
went off the left stde of the
road, over an embankment,
and mto a tree Heavy
damages were mcurred to the
auto, but Flemmg suffered no
mJunes
At 6 15 p.m , autos duven by
Anmce F Jacoby, 25, Rt 3,
Albany, and Jeffrey A Btrchfteld, 18, Rt I, Ractne.
stdeswtped 10 a curve on SR 10
JUSt east of SR 143 m Carpenter
The Shenff's Dept satd
gravel on the road, and the fact
that the curve was narrow
were to blame for the mtshap
Both cars had moderate
damage. No inJunes were

reported

Boosters will

ad.d ,grand~t.and
SYRACUSE - Plans were
made to butld a grandstand at
Kmg Fteld 10 the Syracuse
Mumcipal Park by the
Syracuse - Minersvtlle Sum-

mer Sports Boosters Assn
Tuesday mght

In

other achv1ty, Herman

London
was
reelected
prestdent of the assoctalion.
Sus1e Grueser was named v1ce
president, Barbara Chapman,

Couple
killed
in Akron

secretary, and Jeanette Duffy ,
The Boosters agreed to 1atse
an estimated $l,oo0 to be applied toward butldtng the
grandstand area at the field
nearest to Bndgernan St The
group also dtscussed provtdmg
funds to 1lllprove the backstop
and infteld of the Louks Fteld
area

Weather

Carl Bayless, 17, Akron, was
arresred and charged with two
counts of aggravated murder
He was found dnv10g the
vtctims stolen Cadtllac Pohce
said they believed robbery
may have been the motive.

By ROBERT F BUCKHORN are short, so that all can
operate refinenes at about the
WASHINGTON (UP!) Wtlham E Stmon called today same capactly
The price of overseas 011 ts
for removal by Congress of
satd
to have mcreased well
" dismcenhves'' for maJor 011
comparues to unport all the oil above the cetltng the btg ftrms
that may be ava tlable m order can charge when resellmg to
others.
to relteve U. S. shortages
Consumer advocate Ralph
Stmon satd on the NBC·TV
Nader satd Tuesday that the
btg compantes were not brmg. Today Show "we've got to
mg mto thts country all the otl make sure that whatever oilts
that they can because they can available" ts brought mto the
get htgher prtces in Europe, country He satd "rtgidtties "
need to be removed from the
Japan and elsewhere for tt
law
Sunon did not rei er dtrectly
"It's more removal of disinto Nader's allegatton, based on
centlvel'l
than gwmg mcenpubltshed reports that surfaced
.evcral days ago, but satd the tives, '' Simonsa1d. '' ... We hlv"e
admtmstralton had dectded to to operate thts program wtth
ask for changes m a law passed great flextbillty "
Other developments
last year by Congre$ concern-Sen. Helll'y M Jackson, Dmg tmports
Wash
, predicted Congress
He satd the law conl&lt;lmed
would
overrtde a veto by
''some very great dis mcenPresident
N1xon
of
an
tives " by requmng compames
that obtam good suppltes of otl emergency energy btll whtch ts
to sell some of 11 to others that nearmg ftnal House actwn

-New York became the
stxth state to adopt a mandatory odd-even gaso lin e
rattonmg plan Ltnes at
gasoltne stattons showed ltttle
stgn of gettmg much shorter m
hard-h1l metropohtan areas
where the pmch was ttghtest
-The Natwnal Petrole um
Council, an advtsory bod y to
the InteriOr Department, sa td
"tht:J nat10n will have no
alternattve but to tnslttute
some system of mandatory rahonmg"

1f state

plans

and

federal polictes do not work
better.
- About 8,000 mmers m the
rich s outhern West VIrgmia

coalftelds stayed at home m
protest agamst lack of gasoltne
to commute to work , and
similar walkouts were threat·
ened m southwest VIrginia a nd
eastern Kentucky Emergency
gasoline supplies began arnvmg m Wes t VIrgtma and
Vtrgmta areas

treasurer

Elected to the fman ce
AKRON ( UP!)
A
committee
of the orgamzat10n
promment Akron couple was
found shot to death 10 a park m were Jtm Gu10ther, chatrman,
the inner ctty today, victims of with Jo Ellen Roush and
an "execution style kllhng ," Jeanette Duffy, and Judte
McNtckles, Jo Ellen Roush and
pohce said.
Each was ktlled by a smgle Mary Ann Chancey were
shot 10 the back of the head. named to head the refreshment
They were found face down. staud commtttee
It was also dectded to have
Poltce satd the couple was
membership
ttckets for the
tdentifted as Mr . and Mrs. Paul
assoctalion
prtnted
and ready
Anthony. Anthony ts treasurer
of the Kucko-Hecker Funeral for dtstrtbutwn at the next
meeting, March 26, at 7·30 p m
Home here.
Pohce satd Mrs An\hony
was found with a rosary m her
hand and the man held a
crucifix.

Simon asks freer hand
for big oil companies

Mostly cloudy and warmer
today and tomght wtth htghs 10
the 30s in the north and the 40s
m the south Lows tomght m
the 20s to mtd 30s. Chance of
showers Thursday wtth htghs
10 the 40s and the tower 50s

Nixon won't be called
GOP Breakfast
WASHINGTON (UP! ) The
Prestdent invtted top
Special Prosecutor Leon
Jaworskt, rebuffed 10 one Republtcan leaders to breakattempt to get Prestdent Ntxon fast today to dtscuss GOP
hts legtslattve
to testtfy before a Watergate poliltcs,
programs
and
his ftght agamst
grand JUry, has dectded not to
1lllpeaclunent.
subpoena the Prestdent
The President told his news
Nixon
meanwnile
on
conference
Monday that
Tuesday formally declined a
subpoena to testify at Jaworskt had relayed to him a
Cal1forn1a
criminal
proceedings mvolv10g hts former No. 2 atde, John D
Ehrhclunan
In related developments
- The Prestdent's close
Ne" postage rates wtll go
fnend, Charles G. "Hebe" mto effect at all post offtces at
Rebozo, saJd in a sworn midmght Frtday, March I,
statement that he discussed Pomeroy Postmaster James
w1th Nixon's personal se- Soulsby satd today
cretary, Rosemary Woods, a
The rates for a domestic
$100,000 campatgn donalton letter wtll mcrease from etght
from btllionatre Howard Hugh- cents to 10 cents per ounce or
es, but that the Pr~tdent dtdn'l portton thereof. Airmatl rates
know about tt
wtll go from 11 to 13 cents an
- The House Judtctary Com- ounce Postal cards wtll be
mtttee, study10g posstble 1lll· etght cents and stamped enpeachmenl, made tis ftrst velopes wtU ratse 10 to 12 cents
request to the Whtte House for each
information and ts awatting a Other rates such as loretgn
reply
atr matl, some thtrd class and

request to appear m person
before a Watergate grand JUry
but that he "respec tfully
declined'' on constltuttonal
grounds The request, tt was
learned, came from the grand
JUrors themselves
Sources close to Jaworski 's
mvesltgatton satd Tuesday that
(Conttnued on page 8)

Postage up 25% Friday
second class mathngs etc, wtll
also change Anyone doubtful
of the correct amount of
postage requtred on matltng
should contact thetr local post
office for assistance
Mat! depostted after mtd·
mght Fnday lackmg enough
postage may be delayed or
may be refused by the addressee stnce 1I wtll have to be
forwarded as postage due mat!
All customers are urged to be
certam that the proper amount
of postage stamps are afftxed
to all mail10gs

Lines shorter for gasoline in New York
United Press International
Motorists and servtce station
operators In New York say the
new mandatory system for
regulatmg gasoline sales is
making tl a lot easier to deal
with tbe shortage.
"We can even check the oil,"
sa1d Salvatore Frato, co-owner
of an eight-pump statton on
Staten Island "It's the ftrst
tune tt's been normal since
before Chrtstmas."
Motorists agreed, among
them Don llolloschutz, a
reporter who managed to get
his tank ftlled after a ftve.car
wait. He satd, "if people are
now saymg that happiness ts a
full tank of gas, a full tank of
gas wtthout having to watt on
any line must be heaven. I was
there."

The state mtroduced an

'

Oregon-style odd.;,ven plan
hased on hcense plate numbers
Tuesday, becommg the 14th m
the nation to do so. The
Automobtle Club of New York
satd a survey of 192 stattons
Tuesday showed that hoes of
waiting cars were only about
one to two blocks long, "the
shortest they 've been 10 a very,
very long tune."
In Wash10gton, the Amertcan
Automobtle
Assoctation
reported that a survey of 5,261
stations showed more dealers
hmtltng purchases and
bus10ess boors than a week
earher The average prtce for
gasol10e natwnally was 50
cents a gallon for regular and
54 cents for premtum.
Some emergency shtpments
of gasoline arrtved at servtcc
s tatwns

m

southern West

Vtrgtnta Tuesday, but an
estimated 8,000 m10ers stayed
home for the second day,
protestmg they dtd not have
enough fuel to get to mmes m
some cases as far as 50 mdes
away
State offtctals satd about
250,000 ga)lons of gasolme have
been scheduled for dehvery by
tomght
The Ctvtl Aeronauhcs Board
Tuesday dectded to put off a
scheduled dectston on a 6 per
cent fare hike proposed by
Eastern and Frontter atrlines
to make up for the higher cost
of 1et fuel The board satd m a
statement that needed informatton
has
become
avatlable only wtthm the last
week
Trans World Atrlines announced tt will add 37 datly

flights March I because tis fuel
allocation has been mcreased
from 85 to 95 per cent of the
1972 level Passenger fhghts to
be restored 10clude routes from
Washmgton to Denver and
Phoerux, New York and Tulsa,
Pittsburgh and San Franctseo,
DetrOit and Kansas City and
Kansas City and Louisvtlle.
Oscar Lundin, vtce prestdent
of General Motors, satd m Los
Angeles that the gas shortage
could disappear if motortsts
saved at least two gallons of
gas
a
week
"In
our
JUdgment,"
he
said,
''there IS no need for coupon
gas ratiomng m the natton All
we need to do ts oontmue to use
motor fuel wtsely, for supplies
to be dtstributed effectively,
and for an end to pamc
buy10g "

The odd.;,ven plan went awry
for Atr Force T Sgt Chuck
Foster, who thought hts ltcense
plate had an odd number
Foster was refused servtce by
an attendant at a gas station at
Langley Atr Force Base m
Vtrg101a, who noted that the
last number on hts read plate
was 4. Trying again the next
day , Foster was turned down,
thts tune because the number
on his front plate ended wtth a
3
Foster showed hts regtstratton cards, but could not
convmce the attendant.&lt;; there
had
been
a
mtstake
somewhere It was only after
he traded 10 hts mismatched
plates at the nearest offtce of
the Vtrgma Dtvtswn of Motor
VehicleS that his car's almostdry gas t.lnk was !tiled

�. '

-•'

1

I

________ ,

2- The Da1ly S.nlmel, Middlepori -Pomeroy : o, Feb. 27, 19H

.--------------~--

1 &amp;it...
I

1 Of
I

I

,...

l Goins' musicians

~
..... __,'

the Bend

By Bob Hoeflich

-

,

! rated in Athens
I

,

It's remarkable sometimes how qutckly an economic

s1tuatwn can change Afterall, JUSt think, it hasn 't been so very
long that the gasoline station would g1ve you a coffee cup, a water
tumbler or even a oouple of candles at Chnstmas time for buymg
10 gallons of gas Now, 1f you hnd 10 gallons at the sUlllons,
you 're domg well. I have the feehng that the coffee cup and so
forth have gone from the American scene, also, a premtwn ror
buymg gasolme.
THE QUEEN OF HEARTS contest of U1e Me1gs County
Heart Chapter needs a shot m the arm
Last year, the contest was the greatest smgle money-maker
for the heart hmd dr1ve . This year the contest JUst hasn 't
developed. However, there is still tune
The contest has three age groups - the JUruor prmcess
division, fourth, fifth and sixth graders, the prmcess dmswn,
seventh and e1ghth graders, and ).he queen contest for g~rls from
freshmen through the semor year. Pnzes are awarded the
wmners.
Heart chapter off1c1als extend a cordial invitation for g1rls to
participate. Just call Mrs. James Soulsby at 993-2377 and she'll
fill you m on the deta1ls Hurry though, the deadline 1s drawmg
close

By Umted Press International
The search for the all rmghty
extra dollar tn th1s era of extrem e mnatw n could hurt the
Buff;•lo Braves' playoff cause.
Th1s s1tutlt1on wu s magmfied
111 Tuesday night's 119-112 loss
to I..os Angeles after the Braves
squandered an 11 -pomt lead m
the !mal penod .
J1m McMillian con tnbuled
only four pomts lo the Buffalo
effort. A healthier McMillian
may have proVIded enou gh
firepower to blunt a Laker
comeback, but the Braves
forward was not up to the
occasiOn after suffermg le g
and body bru1ses m a SuperStar competition m Florida
earher th1s week.
Advocates of higher salar1es
for pro athletes could well
argue that if McMillian was
receavmg enough money , promoters would not have been
able to enl1ce him mlo lhal
compellt10n.
McM1lhan was hurt when he

H1 gh School InRecetv rng No . 2 ra llng s tn
solo
and
ensemb le
strumental mus1c pupils of
wereTereasa Elli s, class B,
Oy..1ght Goins received one, pt ano , M eran 1e Burl. c lass A,
two and three ra tings m dif- trombone , Angre Stsson, class
fe rent clas.'ies m solo and en- C, trumpet Paula Etchtn ger,
a ss C, trombone , Mon o Kmg ,
semble compet1hon m Athens ccllass
C,
tr umpet , Pa t ty
Sa turday
Warner , c lass C, clarrne t
Ara tmg of one 1s the h1ghest, Mary Rus hel. cla ss C. ptccolo,
Clarmet trio, Je nny Grate
outsUlndmg performance w1th Debbr
e Tay lor , and Patty
few tcchm cal error s, tw o Warn e r , c la ss C lngr td
ratm g IS unusual performance Ha wley. cl ass B. oboe. Krm
, class C trumpet, F ar th
w1lh minor defects and three is Jones
Pernn , cla ss C, trum pet, Otna
ex ceptiOnal perrormance but Pratt, c lass C tr um pet,
not outstandmg showmg ac- Brenda Bolrn , flute. class C.
Dtana Cars ey, clas s 8,
complishment and prom1se
trump et , and Rtck Couch , class
The classes '-\ere broken down B, tr umpet
mto A, Band C classes w1th A
Recervmg a three rating in
bemg the most d1f!1 cult, class B class C in a trumpet tn o were
Diana Carsey , Ttn t N• en , and
bemg moderately difficult and Rr c k Couch
class C most easy to perform.
Rece1vmg a th ree ratrng 1n
Rece1vmg No 1 r atings m lherr respectrve class in solo
p e flt 1on were Joy Wh 1t e,
so lo com peti t1on Jn their ccom
lass 8 , ban tone sax ophone ,
respective classes were Marc Barb Fultz, class A. fl ute solo.
Fultz, class B, trumpet solo, Phil Ohlinger. c las s B ,
, Tern Ru ssel l. class
Lrsa -Thomas, class B, tenor trombone
C, trumpe t and Cry sta l Glaze.
sax solo ; and Roxae Pa tterson, cl ass B, flut e
class C, trumpet solo.
Me~ gs

.;.;.;.;:;:f,::;:;:;:::w-:.::...:~.;&lt;«h-;::t;;:;:;:~~=..~

Missionaries to

LA rally tops
Braves 119-112

~I

Recently "e published a photograph of the two small
daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Chuck R1ffle holdmg a giant box of
Valenlme candy.
We used the picture to pomt up the cha nges that have Ulken
place on the Amencan scene smce the sellmg pnce of the box of
ca ndy was $23.50
wethought we ought to follow up by letting you know thai the
large Valentine remembrance sold the evemng the photo appeared in the paper and Sw1sher-Lohse, wh1ch had the candy,
had calls for seyeral more boxes of the $23 50 vanely. However,
11 was almost Valentme 's Day and the store had only the one box

Tucker announced
recreation meet

speak tonight

The Rev. and Mrs N1gh ,
United Pentecostal Church
missiOnaries to Germany, will
speak Wednesday evemng al
fell durmg a cycling race. The 7: 30 m the Middleport Umted
Braves would rather have had Pentecostal Church . Pastor
h1m backpedaling on defense in Rev Wilham Kmttel mv1tes
basketball act10n than leamng the public to a ltend. Their
over a set of handlebars of a pre ~entahon m our c1ly w1ll
Include slides, must c and
two-wheeler.
Los Angeles needed the mm1stering about the work- m
Vlctory to rema m 11k gam es Germany
The Umted Pentecos tal
behind Golden State in the
Pacific Division of th e Nahooal Ch urch Int ern ationa l 's
Basketball AssociatiOn after
the Warrmrs beat Phoemx, 12().. overseas m1mstrt es have
tnpled m the past decade
100.
Pat Riley's 15-poml fourth Dehve~ange from drugs and
quarter helped offset Bob miraculous heahngs ac~
McAdoo's 44-pomt game for company this mmistry .
Buffalo McAdoo, who also
collected 24 rebounds, became
the hrsl player to score 2,000 118-101, and Philadelphia
pomls in the NBA lh1s seaso n whipped Portland, 1111-110.
Gall Goodnch led Los Angeles
In the ABA , San Diego
w1th 25 pomts and R1ley had 21 defeated V~rgm1a, 126-119, and
as the Lakers erased Buffalo's Indiana slopped Utah, 110-94
94-l!3 lead w1th 8·26 left m the Warriors 120, Suns 100
game.
Rick Barry was the complete
In other NBA acllon, Boston player as he scored 32 points,
edged Detroit, 86~. New York was high with 14 rebounds and
routed Capital, 85-71 , Houston had eight assist.&lt;; for Golden
ripped Kansas City-Omaha, State. The v1ctory was the third

MASON, W. Va. - Ray
Tucker, president of Mason
Recreation Foundation, has
announced that Sunday,
Mar. 3 at 2 p.m. at Mason
Volunteer Fire Dept. Bldg.,
officers for botb Mason
Recreation Foundation and
Mason Utlle League will be
elected.
Tucker said schedullog of
T-Ball, Pee Wee, Lillie
League and Pony League
will be necessary at that
time.
Other matters lo be
dlscu88ed are forming of au
auxiliary for Mason's Utile
League, aod work on the J.
C. Cook ball field . .

;:;:;:;.:·:·:·:·:·:·::;.;:;.;~:;:;:::;::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:-&gt;:::·:·:·:·:::::·

stra1ght and 16th in the last 22
games lor the Wamors. Clem
Haskins was high for Phoenix
With 31 points.
Celtlcs 86, Pistons 83
Boston buill a 13-pointlead in
the fourth quarter, but still
needed Jo Jo While's free
throw w1th six seconds left to
assure a Celtics' win over
(Continued on page 4)

FEBRUARY, 1974, IN Amenca u; a good tune to reflect on
our h1stoncal past, Return Jonathan Meigs, Daughters of the
Amencan Revolution slate. The D A.R. 1s sponsoring February
as American History month to remmd you of earlier generabons
who gave us what we have today The chapter urges others to
lake llme to learn more about brave Amencans of all races and
creeds
JOHN MOHLER, Middleport Route 1, needs a couple of
pictures to be used on album covers as he conlmues writing his

music.

Their study of " rocks"
became more excatmg for
children of Mrs . Bermce
Carpenter's Middleport first
grade when Dale Jacobs ,
whose hobby is collecting
rocks , mmerals and semtpreclOus stones , spoke to them
Thursday mormng and
displayed items from h1s
"roomful" of rocks collected
from most of the 50 states.
He and Mrs. Jacobs, · who
shares his enthusiasm for rock
hunting, have made some of
their most mteresting fmds m
Kentucky and North Carolina
Jacobs became interested m
his hobby when he was g1ven a
selection of stones and a rock
polisher as a Chnstmas gift
from his daughter, Carol
_Among 1tems described were
geodes, mica, amethyst, fool's
gold, desert rose, petrified
wood from both Arizona and

Services held
for Mrs. Jordan

t

CARPENTER - Funeral
services were held al Temple
Church for Mrs. Faye Jordan,
83, who passed away Feb. 13 at
O'Bleness Memorial Hosp1Ull
in Athens, after suffering a
broken leg in a fall on ice a
week earlier.
Born m Salem Twp near
Salem Center, she had spent
her en tire life m Salem and
Columbia Twps. She was a
member of the Wilkesville
Order of Eastern Star and of
Columbia Grange No. 2435.
She was the daughter of
Edwin and Lezzie King Carpenter W1lhams. United in
mamage to Walter Jordan of
Carpenter m December, 1910,
she is survived by e~ght
children, Velmia McCallie,
Ann Arbor, Mich.; Vina
Rutherford, Columbus; Verna
Queen, McConnelsville;
Mendal and Lavern, Albany,
Rl. 3; Clay and Dorsey,
Pomeroy, Rt. 4 and Edwm,
West Palm Beach, Fla.; 21
grandchildren, seven greatgrandchlldren, and a sister,
Ida Dennison, Albany, Rl. 3.
Preceding her in death were
her husband, Walter· two
daughters,
two
granddaughters and a brother.
Rev. Merlin Teets officiated
at the services and burtal was
m School Lot Cemetery in
charge of the Bigony Funeral
Home w1th Walter Jordan m
charge.
FOREMAN'S SPARRING •
PLEASANTON, Calif (UPI J
-

H eavywetght

cham p ion

George Foreman broke out the
heavy artillery aga1nst three
sparrmg partners Tuesday
during seven rounds of hard
boxing. Foreman is preppmg
for his March 26 tille defense
against No, 2 cont~nder Ken
Norton in Caracas, Venezuela

West V1rgmia , emeralds, onyx,
rose quar tz, garnets, gold,
agate, fhn l from the famous
fimt ndge near Zanesville and
many others
Mr Jacobs enjoys sharmg
his hobby and, as do many
students of nature, sa1d he sees
the planmng of a higher Being
m even the most humble rock.
Each child was given a
poliShed stone as a souvemr of
the talk.

thuJ.Sauef

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school tournament ByUn•l!:~,~~~n~~'t"e~~a!,onal ~~~~~~~y
~* p or s
I@ ByDennyDeskl!lllf action resumes toniuht
East

With the recent announcement of the All-SEOAL first ,
second and honorable mention teams, and smce sportswnters
and broadcasters don't get a chance to vote for the All-SVAC
teams, this corn!!!' feels a pressmg need to publish 1ts opmwn of
whom should comprise the AII-SVAC Dream Team.
After VIewing all the league learns severalllmes, w1th the
exception of North Gall1a, seen for the first tune Saturday 1n
the1r recent Me1gs sectional trmmph, I have had a fairly good
opportunity to observe the talent around tne league.
While in the recent SEOAL balloting, the difference between
a fli'St team and a second learn selection was fairly cut and dr1ed,
it is hard lo fmd a cut off point m selectmg the top SV AC talent.
After much deliberation, and realizing that three of the top
five players who unpressed me the most are guards, just the f1ve
top players m the league will be hsted, and not by a two-guard,
two-forward, center format .
Agam, after careful deliberation and w1th no mtention of
swaymg league coaches in the1r future All-League ballolmg, here
is the first annual Sports Desk All-SV AC Dream Team.
Bob Miller, Southern, seolor guard
Mark Swain, Hannan Trace, juolor guard.
Tim Stout, North GaiUa, senior guard
Sieve DIU, Eastern, seolor center
John Lusher, Hanoao Trace, senior forward
Miller, Swam and Lusher have displayed the best indiVidual
talent as well as team leadership, and ail three are lop candidates for the MVP awards.
Lusher gets this writer's nod, due parhally to hiS excellent
rebounding ability, but more imporUlnlly because of the way the
Wildcats move when he IS in the lineup
Coach oflhe Year honors- if one were to be named- would
have to go 10 Paul Dillon, the mastermind of the 1973-74 Hannan
Trace season, which is still in progress and may go on for some
time.
TWO TOP GAMES ARE on tap for this week in sectional
tournament action, with tonight's South Pomt-Ironton battle and
Saturday's North Gall1a-Southern encounter sure to be nip and
tuck struggles.
The Gallipolis-Rock Hill ganae shouldn't even be close.
South Point, an up-and-down team, has the strength and
shooting ability to upset anybody, and surprised this corner in its
easily handling of Chesapeake, while the SEOAL boys have yet to
do anything in tournanaent play lollowmg their fourth place
finish m the SEOAL.
North Gallia is probably the hottest tourney learn around,
with the Saturday mght performance against the Eastern Eagles
erasmg any doubt as to whether or not the Pirates will be more
competitive m tournament play than they were in the regular
season.
The Tornados, alter losing five of their last six regular
season games, came on to down a hot shooting Kyger Creek
bunch last Friday, with the Carl Wol'e lads spurred on by the
surprise appearance of senior leann leader Bob M11ler.
Miller looked exceptionally sharp for having just come off a
badly sprained ankle, and he should be just that much better
after another week of rest.
THIS WEEK'S TOURNEY predictions :
South Pomt over Ironton - the Pointers are too strong m the
middle for the T1gers, despite some Ironton height of its own
Gallipolis over Roc!· Hill - Pr1ce JUSl may show the entire
tournannent f1eld why he should have been the SEOAL's MVP.
Southern over North Gallia - Bob Miller's back, and lhal
makes all the difference m the world lo the Tornado attack
Defensing P~rates Stout and James should be the key

KC frosh, NG reach
North Gallia and Kyger
Creek will meet at 7 p.m.
Thursday in the championship
game of the Freshman Invitational Tournament al
Kyger Creek High SchooL
Coach Jerry Neal's Pirates
advanced by downing Southern
41-37 m the first game of
Tuesday's tournament.
Coach Jim Arledge's host KC
Bobcats thumped Symmes
Valley, 45-27 m the finale .
In the opening game, North
Gallia jumped mto a 25-21
huUtime lead then held on for
the victory.
Coach Jim Wickline's MiniClouds tied the game in the
waning minutes of the third
quarter and the early part of
the fourth period.
Steve Boso ~ Southern with
12 points while Chr1s Hill
dumped in eight. North
Gallia's v1ctory came on clutch
baskets by Mark Theiss, Dave
Sisson and Brett Tackett
The1ss was the game's top
point-maker With 17 pOints ;
Tackett had eight while Sisson
and M. Wheeler scored seven
each.
North Gall1a h1t Jo of 49 from
the field for 31 pet. and 11 of 14
free throws Southern connected on 17 of &gt;7 from the floor
and only tilree of seven at the
charity stripe.
Kyger Creek jumped into a
14-1! lead in the f1rst quarter,
suddenly became cold in the
next two periods then busted
out with 18 points in the fourth

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quarter lo hand Symmes
Valley a 45-27 loss.
In the f1rst period, Doug
Sands and M1tch Salem paced
the Bobkittens to the1r f1rst
period lead. Sands who finished
with e1ght points had six In the
first quarter. Salem had four
points.
Dw1ght Sw1sher, the game's
leading scorer, had eight of his
11 poinls in the fourth penod.
Other Bobkittens addmg pomts
in the fourth quarter were
Ralph Baylor and Brian Lucas
w1ih lour each.
Dave Kelley topped Coach
John Patton's Vikmgs with
nine points.
Kyger Creek sank 20 of 50
field goal attempts for 40 pet.
and 5 of 9 free tilrows.
Symmes Valley hit 12 of 48
from the field for 25 pet. and
only three of 16 foul shots.
Southern and Symmes
Valley will meet m the consolatwn game al 5.30 p.m
Thursday, Followmg both
games, team trophies w11l be
presented to the f1rst two
teams and an all tournament
team will be named
North Galha (41) - Tackett
1-6-8; Sisson 3-1·7; Theiss 8-117; Mundell 1-0-2 and Wheeler

Actwn will resume th"
· 4"-SJ at Coal Grove and
evemng m the Class A and AA Hannan Trace (18-1) meets
S.ctwnal h1gh school tour - Green (3-15 ) at Ironton
namen l.!;.
Sixty~nme southern Ohio
One So utheastern Ohw teams in three d1v1s1Dn• ,11, AA
League quintet and one and AAA) hit the f1rm g lme on
Southern Vall ey Athlellc Feb 21. Only 41 remamed alive
Conference squad will see today m the "lose and out"
acllon as confident Ironton (7- post-season event as 28 fell by
11) takes on powerful South
the ways1de durmg last week's
first round actwn
F1ve of seven AAA teams are
ahve, 16 of 24 AA teams are
still m the runnmg and 20 o( 38
A squads are still seekmg ·
•
sectional titles and berths m

OU needs

wzn over

Fa leo ns
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
Umversity needs a win over
Bowlmg Green Saturday to
wrap up lhe light MidAmerican Conference race .
But if Bowling Green wins, and
also Toledo, that would throw
the league into a three-way tie,
necessitating a chanapionsh1p
playoff.
MAC CommlSSlOner Fred
Jacoby sa1d Tuesday if a playoff is necessary, 1t would be
played March 4 and 6 al St.
John's Arena on the Ohio Stale
University campus.
01:: currently leads the
league with an 8-3 record, while
BG and Toledo are 7-4.
An OU wm would give the
Bobcats a 9-3 record and an
NCAA tournament b1d.
But if Bowlmg Green wms,
and Toledo defeat.&lt;; Kent Slate,
all three would wind up with 8-3
league records.
Should Bowling Green wm
and Toledo lose to Kent, that
would put Bowling Green and
Ohw U in a tie for the title.
The Falcons would gel the
NCAA bid because they won
both season games from Oh10
University, and OU and Toledo
could hope for a berth either m
the NIT or the new Colleg1ate
Commissioner's Association
tournament m St. Louis.

Tornados, Eagles
.
open tourflament
The Meigs G1rls Invitational
Basketball Tournament gets
under way this evening m the
Larry R Morrison Gym nasium as the Eastern Eagles
take on the Southern Tornados
begmmng at 6 p.m
The f1ve-team tourney
reswnes action Friday, when
the wmner of the Eastern Southern battle meets the
rugged Gallipolis Blue Angels,
followed by the Meigs
Marauder - Kyger Creek
Bobcat battle.
The losers of the two Fnday
games will meet Monday at 4
p.Ql. in the consolation g.ame,
with the wmners of Fnday's
contests meeting in the
champ10nsh1p game at 6 p.m.
AdmissiOn lo the games is 75
cents for adults and 50 cents for
students.
2-3-7. Totals 15-11-41.
Southern (37) - Roush 1-0-2;
Boso 6-3-12; Dunning 2-0-4;
Johnston 1-0-2; Bass 3-1-7;
Spaun 1-0-2; H11l 3-U. Totals
17-3-37.
Kyger Creek ( 45) - Swisher
5-1-11; Salem 2-0-4 ; Brown 1-02; Baylor 3-U; Baird 3-0-6;
Lucas 2-2~. Sands W-il. Totals
20-5-45

Symmes Valley (27) Kelley 4-1-9; Wilson 3-0-6;
Geswem 1-0-2; Myers 0-1-1 ;
Miller 0-1-1; Stumbo 1-0-2;
Clary 244; Miller 1-0-2. Totals
12-3-27
Off1cials - Mel Carter and
John Milhoan

3.50 PER HOUR

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Ph . 446, 0677

10 A.M. lo8 P.M.

wee k's d1 s tnct tour~
naments
In other games mvolving
area AA teams tomght .
Shendan
( 10-8)
meets
Nelsonville-York (12-7) al
Stewart Northwest 11-16 1
battles powerful Wheelersburg
(14-5) at Lucasv1lle. At Unioto,
Southern
Ohio
League
champiOn Washington Court
House 115-3) battles Oak H1ll
18-11).
In other Class A games
Huntington of Ross County (
15) mee:.S B1shop Flagel (12-9)
next

4:

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at Ch1lhcothe; South Webster
( t5-6 I tackles Portsmouth East
(9-10) at Portsmouth and
Western of P1ke I 17-4 ) meets
Manchester (8-11) at Hillsboro.
Thursday, M1am1 Trace ( 117) defending AAA sectional and
district champion, w1ll take on
Manetta ( 13-liJ at Rio Grande's
Lyne Center On Friday, Logan
( 12-7) Will battle top-seeded
Ch1lhcothe ( 15-3 ) at Rio
Grande.
All tournament games start
at 7.30 p.m .

Wittenberg champion
Ohio College Basketball
By Uolled Press lnleroatlonal
Wittenberg University added
the Ohio Conference basketball
crown to the football title the
T1gers captured last fall w1th a
surpnsmgly
easy 62-48
conquest of Oh10 Northern
Tuesday night m the league
tournament champwnsh1p
game.
The T1gers, led by Jun Evans
With 18 point.&lt;; and Ed Ford Wllh
15 markers, now advance to the
NCAA Great Lakes regional
tournament al EvarJ&gt;ville, Ind.
Ohio Northern, paced by AI
Donhoff with 17 pmnts, finished

the season w1th an 18-6 record, w1th B1~ Ten rival Purdue.
The Boilermakers turned on
wh1Ie Wittenberg enters
their
scoring power to register
tournannenl play with a 20-:l
mark.
a 99~ wm over BG for their
M1d-Amencan Conference 17th VIctory m 25 ganaes this
leader Ohio Umversity got an year behind an 18-poinl scormg
outstanding scoring per- performance from Bruce
formance from sophomore Parkinson. Three other Purdue
guard Walter Luckett m a 7~9 starters scored 1n double
f1gures.
wm over Penn Slate.
The Falcons dropped to 15-10
Luckett scorched the nets for
37 pmnts to help the Bobcats for the season.
In other games Tuesday
push the1r season record to 1510. Penn State dropped to 14-11. night, Wilmington took a 98-89
Bowling Green, second in the win over Cedarville and Wright
MAC standmgs w1th one Stale outscored Thomas More
conference game left to play, (Ky.), 80-68.
didn't fare as well in a contest

Wolfpack defeats Tarheels
By United Press lnteroatlooal
Tommy Burleson had
himself a ball.
Burleson, the 7-fool-4 center
for top ranked North Carolma
State, scored 22 points and
pulled down II of h1s team's 38
rebounds Tuesday night to lead
the Wolfpack past arch-rival
North Carolina 83-72.
The VIctory, a record 29th in
a row m conference play for
Stale, enabled the Wolfpack to
clmch the Atlantic Coast
regular season title and w1th 1l
a f1rst round bye m next week's
posl~eason tourney that will
determine the ACC's representative in' the NCAA tournament. The wm also upped
N.C. State's overall record for
the season to 23-1 w1th the lone
loss coming at the hands of
third ranked UCLA in
December.
"I JUSt gave the game hall to
Burleson," said coach Norm
Sloan after his team's triumph
over the Tar Heels. "I've never
done that before in my entire
coaching career. He was truly
the best big man out there
tomght . Sure we have Dav1d
(Thompson) and Monte
(Towe) but w1thoul the big
man 1t would be awfully
tough."
"This IS the greatest Stale
team I've ever seen/' com·
mented North Carolina coach
Dean Smith whose fourth
ranked Tar Heels lost for only
the fourth lime in 24 games this
season with three of the setbacks supplied by the Wolfpack. "They pressed us real
well on defense throughout the

game."
Sloan Praises Team
North Carolina was highly
motivated and the first half
was unbelievably tough, but
our boys hung in there and

played a great second half,"
added Sloan whose learn
finishes 11.&lt;; regJJiar season
Saturday against Wake Forest.
Burleson tallied 19 of his
points in the second haU when
N.C. State rallied from a 34-32
intermission deficit. Thompson
fimshed With 21 points and
Rivers had 19 for the Wolfpack
while Walter Davis paced the
Tar Heels with 18.
North Carolina took a 40-34
lead after tilree rmnules of the
second half before Burleson got
hot, hilling for 11 points as the
Wolfpack out.&lt;;cored the Tar
Heels 23-6 during the next eight
minutes lo take a corhmanding
&gt;7-46 lead.
Only three other learns
ranked m the UPf Top Twenty
were m acllon with second
ranked Notre Dame overwhelming Ball State 9~9, 14th
ranked Kansas beatmg
Nebraska 51-46 and 15th ranked
Kansas State edging Missouri
69~7 .

Shumale 's 31 Points
All-America candidate John
Shumate scored 31 pomt.&lt;; and
had 15 rebounds for Notr~
Dame as the Irish, with two
regular season games remammg, upped their record to
23-1. Adrian Dantley added 26
pomls to the Notre Dame offense while Chris Collins led
Ball State with 18 points .
Kansas outscored Nebraska
14-2 midway through the
second haU to down the Cornhuskers and keep it.&lt;; B1g
Eight title hopes alive. The
Jayhawks trail first place
Kansas State by a half game as
the Wildcats used Lon Kruger's
two free throws with nine
seconds left to nip Missouri.
Texas Tech and Texas
remained tied for the lead in
the Southwest Conference as

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Rae 1ne's new emergency
ambulance are
Mr . and Mrs. Bill McKelvey,
Mr and Mrs Jun1or Ne1gler,
Fern Gaul, Mr and Mrs Tom
Theiss. Racine Gas Co., Mr.
and Mrs. John R. Lee, Calvin
Orr, Warren G. Rose, Mr and
Mrs Clifford Holter, Mr . and
Mrs. Emmett Stethen, Mr. and
Mrs. James Ray Lawrence,
Mr and Mrs . Freeland Norns,
Mr- and Mrs Fred E. R1tch1e,
Mr and Mrs Grover Salser,

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both canae through w1lh VIC·
tories. The Red Raiders' Rick
Bullock hit for 41 points to lead
Tech past TCU 77~ whlle
Texas thumped Arkansas 9982. SMU remamed one game
behind the co-leaders with one
game left by lrirruning R1ve 11979.
LaSalle beat Delaware 7~9
and Lafayette got by American
University &gt;9-55 in the opening
round of the Middle Atlanbc
Conference playoffs
College Basketball Results
By United Press International
Playoffs
Middle
Atlantic
Corllerence
Playoff (1st round)
LaSalle 78 Delaware 69
Lfaytt 59 Amrcn U 55

EaSI
Hartw1ck 71 Montcta1r St 6-t
Rochester Tech 1M Elm i ra 73
Northeastern 88 Boston U 78
Connect1cut 77 Boston Coli 69
Brown 83 Rhode I sland 68
Barrmgton 76 N1chots 61
New Hampsh1re 63 Dartmouth
61

W1ll1ams 120 Clark &lt;Mass 1 87
Westfield 71 North Adam s 50
Kmg•s (NY) 77 Blmlld 70
Salem St 83 Frmnghm St 57
St J fN v J 98 H Cross 71
Bloomsburg 115 York (Pa J 70
CCNY 72York (NY l 58
St Lawrence 60 Colgate 49
Rnsslr Poly 102 Ham11ton 73
Seton Hall 75 V1tlanova 62
Tufts 83 Tr1n1ly (Conn l 66
Albright 84 Wash (Md J 67
Pratt 79 Concordia ( N Y l 67
Wesleyan 83 Brandeis 77
Eastern Nazarene 76 Nasson 71
Adelphi 88 Brooklyn Coli 80
Soulh
N Car St 83 N Car 72
Randolph Ma con 79 Mdsn 65
Transy l vania 9.:1 lnd SEt 83
Fla Sf 86 FDU (Rthrfrd} 58
Midwest
Notre Dame 93 Ball St 69
Oh 10 u. 78 Penn St 59
Wrrght St 80 Thomas More 68
Valparaiso 121 Wabash 74
Wilmington 98 Cedarville 89
Kansas St 69 Mlssovrl 67
Purdue 99 Bowl1ng Green 83
Kansas 51 Nebraska .:16
Kansas St 69 Missouri 67
Southwest
McMurry 86 Texas Wesleyan 67
SMU 89 Rt ce 79
Texas 99 Arkansas 82
Tu:as A&amp;M 94 Baylor 72
Texas Tech 77 TCU 66
up1 02 -27 02.19 aed
v
vlydsv
WHAstgs 2-27
WHA Standings
By Unrled Press International
East
w 1 t pts
gf ga
New Eng! 33 26 2 68 219 203
Toronto
32 28 4 68 248 222
Quebec
32 28 3 67 239 219
Clevel
Chrcago

28 27
27 29

Jersey

26

5 61
3 57

3&lt;~ 2 54
West

w. 1. 1. pts

192
192

uta h
Indiana
San A nton1o

Denver

w I pet g b
42 24 636 39 25 609
2
42 29
22 43

592
338

21h
19 1J,

17 50 254 2W?
We s t
w 1• pet . 9 b
~ ! ~j 647 522
B'h

J l 33
30 35

500 10

462 12'1
29 38 433 14 ,11,
,
uesday s Res ults
San D 1ego 126 V 1rg1n1a 119
l nd1ana 110 Utah 9d
\O nly games sc hedu l ed I
Wednesday's Games
San Anton io at New York
V1rgm1a a t Ken tu cky
lnd1ana a! Denver
San D1ego v s Caro 11na
at Gr eensboro
(Only games sc hedul ed )
San D 1e go
T

i~ l: ~:; ~::

Phoen1 x
25 d2 373 13
Portland
21 45 JI B 16' ,
Tuesday' !i Res ulh
L os Ang 119 Buffa lo ll2
New York 85 Cap 1tal 71
Hou ston 118 KC Omaha 101
Bos to n 86 0!!-lr OI I eJ
Phil a 118 Port laM 100
G Stat e 120 Phoen 1x 100
(O nly games sc hedu lecO
W e dnesday 's Games
Buffalo vs Bos t on
a t Prov1den ce
KC Oma h a at Atlanta

Seat tl e at Cap 1tal

L os Ang at Milwaukee

Ch1cago at Phoen 1x
!O nly gam es sche duled)

Amenc.an Ho ckey
Le a gu e Standmg s
By Un1ted Press Jnternat tona l
North
NBA Slandmgs
w I I pi s gf g a
By Un1ted Press lnternatronal
Roc hes ter
]4 17 10 18 204 204
Ea stern Conference
PrOviden ce 33 23 8 14 2!1 1 205
Atlan11c Dtvts 1on
w
1. pet g b . New Haven 3 1 21 10 72 217 203
Nova Scot1a 28 23 10 66 213 183
Boston
d S 17
726
New Yo r k
4126 612
6 1 1 Sprmgf1 eld 13 3 1 13 d) 187 253
17 36 9 43 1!19 2&lt;~8
Buffalo
35 3.:1 507 l)lf ? Boston
South
Phil a
20 .:16 30 3 27
w I t pts gf ga
Central DIVISIOn
Hers h ey
32 19 10 74 252 194
w
I pet g b
Bal l1m or e 33 20 8 74 244 189
Ca p1ta l
37 29 561
Atla nta
28 39 418
91'2 C1nc mna i1 33 10 1 73 217 186
V 1rg 1n1a '
20 33 8 48 175 7',19
Hous ton
26 d 1 388 11lfl Ja
cks onv1l le
Cleveland
23 47 329 16
20 36 ] 47 187 263
Western Conference
Rtchmond
17 34 8 42 174 246
Mrdwest DIVISIOn
Tuesday 's Resl!tt s
w. I pet g b Ba l t1 mor
e 2 Boston 2
Milwaukee
.:18 11 738
Jacksonville &lt;I V1rgm1a 3
Ch 1cago
46 22 676
J l! 2
(On l y games scheduled )
De trort
4d 24 647
5117
Today's Game s
KC Omaha
26 43 377 24
Vlrgm•a at Cmcmnat1
PaCifiC DIVISIOn
w I pet g b . R• chmond at H er shey
Spr1nQf 1eld at N ew H aven
G Stat e
36 27 57 1

the day after .

• •

by the editor
Two sports-related subjects come lo mmd today, maybe
because Saturday mghl two sport.&lt;;-minded old acquamtances
shook my hand Saturday al dinner "Ulken out "One was Hubert
Price of Portland who must be about my age but doesn't look 1t,
and the other Bill McKelvey ,also of Portland, who does look 11 (if
you will pardon me, Bill).
Both of these men fathered outstanding athletes in what 1s
now the Southern Local School District. Bona fide basketball
stars were B1lly and MarVIn McKelvey and Sam and Larry
Price, the IaUer also a fine lefthanded pitcher for Racine H1gh
and Marietta College.
All but Billy McKelvey are in educaUon: Marvin m the Me1gs
Local District, and Sam and Larry Pr1ce elsewhere. Bllly 1s a
prosperous Insurance agent in the Boston, Mass area. Bruce, the
McKelvey's third son-agamsl no daughters- is at home More
about Sam and Larry Price will have to come later.
Because they were of the same era, the McKelveys and
Pr1ces recalled the welcomed promotion this week of Terry
Ohlinger, about 29, to the superintendency of the Franklin Local
School District (Philo, Ohio).
Terry, a fine Pomeroy High School athlete-basketball and
baseball-earned a starting role as a sophomore on the
basketball team. He went on lo play three seasons as a varSity
regular al Pomeroy, but never played at Ohio U where he took
his degree in Physical Education and later hu; master's in administration. Terry came back to Meigs Local to teach and ass1st
in basketball coach under Carl WoUe . He went to Philo as
assistant principal and had moved up to the head cha1r before
being named superintendent.
Terry decided to come out for baseball m hiS senior year al
Pomeroy. As a wrong~ide pitcher he was unusually effectlve as
the Panthers had another of their winning seasons under coach
Russ Moore, now the Meigs Local Junior High principaL
It's too had Terry got away from Me1gs LocaL But it's
Franklin Local's good fortune
THE OTHER SPORTSY ITEM is how Hobart Wilson Jr ,
editor of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, is known throughout the
middle Ohio Valley for his total dedication to "Sports" came to
be known in earlier years as "Rafters" W1lson. Wilson's
daughter, Brenda, a junior at GAHS is an outstanding performer
on the Blue Angels basketball team. Brenda is also a fine
trumpeter in the Blue Devil band, but that, too, is another story.
Dad Wilson one day recently, toting up daughter Brenda's
shooting percentage from the floor, recalled how he got the
name, Rafters.
It was in the 1949-SO basketball season that Dad Wilson,
playing a guard in the reserves as a sophomore il) the old
Washington School gym, got off a last second shot against
Middleport from near rmd-court m a desperate attempt to snatch
VICtory from defeat.
"That shot went so high," he chuckled, "1t bounced aroond m
the rafters. I thoughtit never would come down."
From that day he was known as Rafters W1lson.

GOLDEN GLOVES
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
annual Columbus Golden
Gloves boxing tournament
finals will be held here
Saturday, March 9. This
week's activity is slated for the
Lausche Building on the Ohio
State Fairgrounds, with the
March 9 finals slated for Ohio
Slate's St. John Arena.

WINNING CHICK
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Cap1lal University's Vince
Chickeretla has a record of 113
wins and 33 losses in his s1x
years at the school, the third
best winning percentage (.744)
among the NCAA's college
Wviston coaches.
Capital is 59-14 m the Ohio
Conference and 53-ii at home
during Chickerella 's regune .

197
204

193 '235

gl

Houston 38 18 5 81 248
M lnnesot 33 26 1 67 241
wmn1peg 29 29 5 63 206
Edmontn 30 30 0 60 207
vancouvr 23 37 0 46 225
LOS Ang
21 110 0 112 178
Tuesday's Results
Hovston 3 Vancouver 2
Quebec 7 Wmnlpeg 1
Chicago A Los Ang 2
fOnly games scheduled }
Wednesday's Games
Los Ang at Mmnesota
Toronto at New England
{Only games scheduled)

u•

161
208
226
216
253
24.4

MAC LEADERS
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - Walt
Luckett of Ohio University, despite seeing his average drop
off the last .few games, has
clinched the Mid-American
Conference scoring race with
an average of 22.5 points per
game. Second to Luckett is Miarm's Phil Lumpkin at 17.8.
The leading rebounder Is
Kent Stale's Bradley Robinson
at 15.8 per game, while Paul
Griffin of Western Michigan
leads m field goal accuracy
with a .596 mark and
Bowling Green's Jeff Montgomery is the top free throw
shooter at .841 per cent (6!J.82).

Factory Retreads ,

Plus Federal Tax of 82c Per Tire
Mounting, No Charge

•Plus Recappable Tire
•AnY Size - Passenger Car Tire
MEIGS TIRE CENTER
700 E. Main St.

POMEROY, OHIO
992-2101

�. '

-•'

1

I

________ ,

2- The Da1ly S.nlmel, Middlepori -Pomeroy : o, Feb. 27, 19H

.--------------~--

1 &amp;it...
I

1 Of
I

I

,...

l Goins' musicians

~
..... __,'

the Bend

By Bob Hoeflich

-

,

! rated in Athens
I

,

It's remarkable sometimes how qutckly an economic

s1tuatwn can change Afterall, JUSt think, it hasn 't been so very
long that the gasoline station would g1ve you a coffee cup, a water
tumbler or even a oouple of candles at Chnstmas time for buymg
10 gallons of gas Now, 1f you hnd 10 gallons at the sUlllons,
you 're domg well. I have the feehng that the coffee cup and so
forth have gone from the American scene, also, a premtwn ror
buymg gasolme.
THE QUEEN OF HEARTS contest of U1e Me1gs County
Heart Chapter needs a shot m the arm
Last year, the contest was the greatest smgle money-maker
for the heart hmd dr1ve . This year the contest JUst hasn 't
developed. However, there is still tune
The contest has three age groups - the JUruor prmcess
division, fourth, fifth and sixth graders, the prmcess dmswn,
seventh and e1ghth graders, and ).he queen contest for g~rls from
freshmen through the semor year. Pnzes are awarded the
wmners.
Heart chapter off1c1als extend a cordial invitation for g1rls to
participate. Just call Mrs. James Soulsby at 993-2377 and she'll
fill you m on the deta1ls Hurry though, the deadline 1s drawmg
close

By Umted Press International
The search for the all rmghty
extra dollar tn th1s era of extrem e mnatw n could hurt the
Buff;•lo Braves' playoff cause.
Th1s s1tutlt1on wu s magmfied
111 Tuesday night's 119-112 loss
to I..os Angeles after the Braves
squandered an 11 -pomt lead m
the !mal penod .
J1m McMillian con tnbuled
only four pomts lo the Buffalo
effort. A healthier McMillian
may have proVIded enou gh
firepower to blunt a Laker
comeback, but the Braves
forward was not up to the
occasiOn after suffermg le g
and body bru1ses m a SuperStar competition m Florida
earher th1s week.
Advocates of higher salar1es
for pro athletes could well
argue that if McMillian was
receavmg enough money , promoters would not have been
able to enl1ce him mlo lhal
compellt10n.
McM1lhan was hurt when he

H1 gh School InRecetv rng No . 2 ra llng s tn
solo
and
ensemb le
strumental mus1c pupils of
wereTereasa Elli s, class B,
Oy..1ght Goins received one, pt ano , M eran 1e Burl. c lass A,
two and three ra tings m dif- trombone , Angre Stsson, class
fe rent clas.'ies m solo and en- C, trumpet Paula Etchtn ger,
a ss C, trombone , Mon o Kmg ,
semble compet1hon m Athens ccllass
C,
tr umpet , Pa t ty
Sa turday
Warner , c lass C, clarrne t
Ara tmg of one 1s the h1ghest, Mary Rus hel. cla ss C. ptccolo,
Clarmet trio, Je nny Grate
outsUlndmg performance w1th Debbr
e Tay lor , and Patty
few tcchm cal error s, tw o Warn e r , c la ss C lngr td
ratm g IS unusual performance Ha wley. cl ass B. oboe. Krm
, class C trumpet, F ar th
w1lh minor defects and three is Jones
Pernn , cla ss C, trum pet, Otna
ex ceptiOnal perrormance but Pratt, c lass C tr um pet,
not outstandmg showmg ac- Brenda Bolrn , flute. class C.
Dtana Cars ey, clas s 8,
complishment and prom1se
trump et , and Rtck Couch , class
The classes '-\ere broken down B, tr umpet
mto A, Band C classes w1th A
Recervmg a three rating in
bemg the most d1f!1 cult, class B class C in a trumpet tn o were
Diana Carsey , Ttn t N• en , and
bemg moderately difficult and Rr c k Couch
class C most easy to perform.
Rece1vmg a th ree ratrng 1n
Rece1vmg No 1 r atings m lherr respectrve class in solo
p e flt 1on were Joy Wh 1t e,
so lo com peti t1on Jn their ccom
lass 8 , ban tone sax ophone ,
respective classes were Marc Barb Fultz, class A. fl ute solo.
Fultz, class B, trumpet solo, Phil Ohlinger. c las s B ,
, Tern Ru ssel l. class
Lrsa -Thomas, class B, tenor trombone
C, trumpe t and Cry sta l Glaze.
sax solo ; and Roxae Pa tterson, cl ass B, flut e
class C, trumpet solo.
Me~ gs

.;.;.;.;:;:f,::;:;:;:::w-:.::...:~.;&lt;«h-;::t;;:;:;:~~=..~

Missionaries to

LA rally tops
Braves 119-112

~I

Recently "e published a photograph of the two small
daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Chuck R1ffle holdmg a giant box of
Valenlme candy.
We used the picture to pomt up the cha nges that have Ulken
place on the Amencan scene smce the sellmg pnce of the box of
ca ndy was $23.50
wethought we ought to follow up by letting you know thai the
large Valentine remembrance sold the evemng the photo appeared in the paper and Sw1sher-Lohse, wh1ch had the candy,
had calls for seyeral more boxes of the $23 50 vanely. However,
11 was almost Valentme 's Day and the store had only the one box

Tucker announced
recreation meet

speak tonight

The Rev. and Mrs N1gh ,
United Pentecostal Church
missiOnaries to Germany, will
speak Wednesday evemng al
fell durmg a cycling race. The 7: 30 m the Middleport Umted
Braves would rather have had Pentecostal Church . Pastor
h1m backpedaling on defense in Rev Wilham Kmttel mv1tes
basketball act10n than leamng the public to a ltend. Their
over a set of handlebars of a pre ~entahon m our c1ly w1ll
Include slides, must c and
two-wheeler.
Los Angeles needed the mm1stering about the work- m
Vlctory to rema m 11k gam es Germany
The Umted Pentecos tal
behind Golden State in the
Pacific Division of th e Nahooal Ch urch Int ern ationa l 's
Basketball AssociatiOn after
the Warrmrs beat Phoemx, 12().. overseas m1mstrt es have
tnpled m the past decade
100.
Pat Riley's 15-poml fourth Dehve~ange from drugs and
quarter helped offset Bob miraculous heahngs ac~
McAdoo's 44-pomt game for company this mmistry .
Buffalo McAdoo, who also
collected 24 rebounds, became
the hrsl player to score 2,000 118-101, and Philadelphia
pomls in the NBA lh1s seaso n whipped Portland, 1111-110.
Gall Goodnch led Los Angeles
In the ABA , San Diego
w1th 25 pomts and R1ley had 21 defeated V~rgm1a, 126-119, and
as the Lakers erased Buffalo's Indiana slopped Utah, 110-94
94-l!3 lead w1th 8·26 left m the Warriors 120, Suns 100
game.
Rick Barry was the complete
In other NBA acllon, Boston player as he scored 32 points,
edged Detroit, 86~. New York was high with 14 rebounds and
routed Capital, 85-71 , Houston had eight assist.&lt;; for Golden
ripped Kansas City-Omaha, State. The v1ctory was the third

MASON, W. Va. - Ray
Tucker, president of Mason
Recreation Foundation, has
announced that Sunday,
Mar. 3 at 2 p.m. at Mason
Volunteer Fire Dept. Bldg.,
officers for botb Mason
Recreation Foundation and
Mason Utlle League will be
elected.
Tucker said schedullog of
T-Ball, Pee Wee, Lillie
League and Pony League
will be necessary at that
time.
Other matters lo be
dlscu88ed are forming of au
auxiliary for Mason's Utile
League, aod work on the J.
C. Cook ball field . .

;:;:;:;.:·:·:·:·:·:·::;.;:;.;~:;:;:::;::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:-&gt;:::·:·:·:·:::::·

stra1ght and 16th in the last 22
games lor the Wamors. Clem
Haskins was high for Phoenix
With 31 points.
Celtlcs 86, Pistons 83
Boston buill a 13-pointlead in
the fourth quarter, but still
needed Jo Jo While's free
throw w1th six seconds left to
assure a Celtics' win over
(Continued on page 4)

FEBRUARY, 1974, IN Amenca u; a good tune to reflect on
our h1stoncal past, Return Jonathan Meigs, Daughters of the
Amencan Revolution slate. The D A.R. 1s sponsoring February
as American History month to remmd you of earlier generabons
who gave us what we have today The chapter urges others to
lake llme to learn more about brave Amencans of all races and
creeds
JOHN MOHLER, Middleport Route 1, needs a couple of
pictures to be used on album covers as he conlmues writing his

music.

Their study of " rocks"
became more excatmg for
children of Mrs . Bermce
Carpenter's Middleport first
grade when Dale Jacobs ,
whose hobby is collecting
rocks , mmerals and semtpreclOus stones , spoke to them
Thursday mormng and
displayed items from h1s
"roomful" of rocks collected
from most of the 50 states.
He and Mrs. Jacobs, · who
shares his enthusiasm for rock
hunting, have made some of
their most mteresting fmds m
Kentucky and North Carolina
Jacobs became interested m
his hobby when he was g1ven a
selection of stones and a rock
polisher as a Chnstmas gift
from his daughter, Carol
_Among 1tems described were
geodes, mica, amethyst, fool's
gold, desert rose, petrified
wood from both Arizona and

Services held
for Mrs. Jordan

t

CARPENTER - Funeral
services were held al Temple
Church for Mrs. Faye Jordan,
83, who passed away Feb. 13 at
O'Bleness Memorial Hosp1Ull
in Athens, after suffering a
broken leg in a fall on ice a
week earlier.
Born m Salem Twp near
Salem Center, she had spent
her en tire life m Salem and
Columbia Twps. She was a
member of the Wilkesville
Order of Eastern Star and of
Columbia Grange No. 2435.
She was the daughter of
Edwin and Lezzie King Carpenter W1lhams. United in
mamage to Walter Jordan of
Carpenter m December, 1910,
she is survived by e~ght
children, Velmia McCallie,
Ann Arbor, Mich.; Vina
Rutherford, Columbus; Verna
Queen, McConnelsville;
Mendal and Lavern, Albany,
Rl. 3; Clay and Dorsey,
Pomeroy, Rt. 4 and Edwm,
West Palm Beach, Fla.; 21
grandchildren, seven greatgrandchlldren, and a sister,
Ida Dennison, Albany, Rl. 3.
Preceding her in death were
her husband, Walter· two
daughters,
two
granddaughters and a brother.
Rev. Merlin Teets officiated
at the services and burtal was
m School Lot Cemetery in
charge of the Bigony Funeral
Home w1th Walter Jordan m
charge.
FOREMAN'S SPARRING •
PLEASANTON, Calif (UPI J
-

H eavywetght

cham p ion

George Foreman broke out the
heavy artillery aga1nst three
sparrmg partners Tuesday
during seven rounds of hard
boxing. Foreman is preppmg
for his March 26 tille defense
against No, 2 cont~nder Ken
Norton in Caracas, Venezuela

West V1rgmia , emeralds, onyx,
rose quar tz, garnets, gold,
agate, fhn l from the famous
fimt ndge near Zanesville and
many others
Mr Jacobs enjoys sharmg
his hobby and, as do many
students of nature, sa1d he sees
the planmng of a higher Being
m even the most humble rock.
Each child was given a
poliShed stone as a souvemr of
the talk.

thuJ.Sauef

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school tournament ByUn•l!:~,~~~n~~'t"e~~a!,onal ~~~~~~~y
~* p or s
I@ ByDennyDeskl!lllf action resumes toniuht
East

With the recent announcement of the All-SEOAL first ,
second and honorable mention teams, and smce sportswnters
and broadcasters don't get a chance to vote for the All-SVAC
teams, this corn!!!' feels a pressmg need to publish 1ts opmwn of
whom should comprise the AII-SVAC Dream Team.
After VIewing all the league learns severalllmes, w1th the
exception of North Gall1a, seen for the first tune Saturday 1n
the1r recent Me1gs sectional trmmph, I have had a fairly good
opportunity to observe the talent around tne league.
While in the recent SEOAL balloting, the difference between
a fli'St team and a second learn selection was fairly cut and dr1ed,
it is hard lo fmd a cut off point m selectmg the top SV AC talent.
After much deliberation, and realizing that three of the top
five players who unpressed me the most are guards, just the f1ve
top players m the league will be hsted, and not by a two-guard,
two-forward, center format .
Agam, after careful deliberation and w1th no mtention of
swaymg league coaches in the1r future All-League ballolmg, here
is the first annual Sports Desk All-SV AC Dream Team.
Bob Miller, Southern, seolor guard
Mark Swain, Hannan Trace, juolor guard.
Tim Stout, North GaiUa, senior guard
Sieve DIU, Eastern, seolor center
John Lusher, Hanoao Trace, senior forward
Miller, Swam and Lusher have displayed the best indiVidual
talent as well as team leadership, and ail three are lop candidates for the MVP awards.
Lusher gets this writer's nod, due parhally to hiS excellent
rebounding ability, but more imporUlnlly because of the way the
Wildcats move when he IS in the lineup
Coach oflhe Year honors- if one were to be named- would
have to go 10 Paul Dillon, the mastermind of the 1973-74 Hannan
Trace season, which is still in progress and may go on for some
time.
TWO TOP GAMES ARE on tap for this week in sectional
tournament action, with tonight's South Pomt-Ironton battle and
Saturday's North Gall1a-Southern encounter sure to be nip and
tuck struggles.
The Gallipolis-Rock Hill ganae shouldn't even be close.
South Point, an up-and-down team, has the strength and
shooting ability to upset anybody, and surprised this corner in its
easily handling of Chesapeake, while the SEOAL boys have yet to
do anything in tournanaent play lollowmg their fourth place
finish m the SEOAL.
North Gallia is probably the hottest tourney learn around,
with the Saturday mght performance against the Eastern Eagles
erasmg any doubt as to whether or not the Pirates will be more
competitive m tournament play than they were in the regular
season.
The Tornados, alter losing five of their last six regular
season games, came on to down a hot shooting Kyger Creek
bunch last Friday, with the Carl Wol'e lads spurred on by the
surprise appearance of senior leann leader Bob M11ler.
Miller looked exceptionally sharp for having just come off a
badly sprained ankle, and he should be just that much better
after another week of rest.
THIS WEEK'S TOURNEY predictions :
South Pomt over Ironton - the Pointers are too strong m the
middle for the T1gers, despite some Ironton height of its own
Gallipolis over Roc!· Hill - Pr1ce JUSl may show the entire
tournannent f1eld why he should have been the SEOAL's MVP.
Southern over North Gallia - Bob Miller's back, and lhal
makes all the difference m the world lo the Tornado attack
Defensing P~rates Stout and James should be the key

KC frosh, NG reach
North Gallia and Kyger
Creek will meet at 7 p.m.
Thursday in the championship
game of the Freshman Invitational Tournament al
Kyger Creek High SchooL
Coach Jerry Neal's Pirates
advanced by downing Southern
41-37 m the first game of
Tuesday's tournament.
Coach Jim Arledge's host KC
Bobcats thumped Symmes
Valley, 45-27 m the finale .
In the opening game, North
Gallia jumped mto a 25-21
huUtime lead then held on for
the victory.
Coach Jim Wickline's MiniClouds tied the game in the
waning minutes of the third
quarter and the early part of
the fourth period.
Steve Boso ~ Southern with
12 points while Chr1s Hill
dumped in eight. North
Gallia's v1ctory came on clutch
baskets by Mark Theiss, Dave
Sisson and Brett Tackett
The1ss was the game's top
point-maker With 17 pOints ;
Tackett had eight while Sisson
and M. Wheeler scored seven
each.
North Gall1a h1t Jo of 49 from
the field for 31 pet. and 11 of 14
free throws Southern connected on 17 of &gt;7 from the floor
and only tilree of seven at the
charity stripe.
Kyger Creek jumped into a
14-1! lead in the f1rst quarter,
suddenly became cold in the
next two periods then busted
out with 18 points in the fourth

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quarter lo hand Symmes
Valley a 45-27 loss.
In the f1rst period, Doug
Sands and M1tch Salem paced
the Bobkittens to the1r f1rst
period lead. Sands who finished
with e1ght points had six In the
first quarter. Salem had four
points.
Dw1ght Sw1sher, the game's
leading scorer, had eight of his
11 poinls in the fourth penod.
Other Bobkittens addmg pomts
in the fourth quarter were
Ralph Baylor and Brian Lucas
w1ih lour each.
Dave Kelley topped Coach
John Patton's Vikmgs with
nine points.
Kyger Creek sank 20 of 50
field goal attempts for 40 pet.
and 5 of 9 free tilrows.
Symmes Valley hit 12 of 48
from the field for 25 pet. and
only three of 16 foul shots.
Southern and Symmes
Valley will meet m the consolatwn game al 5.30 p.m
Thursday, Followmg both
games, team trophies w11l be
presented to the f1rst two
teams and an all tournament
team will be named
North Galha (41) - Tackett
1-6-8; Sisson 3-1·7; Theiss 8-117; Mundell 1-0-2 and Wheeler

Actwn will resume th"
· 4"-SJ at Coal Grove and
evemng m the Class A and AA Hannan Trace (18-1) meets
S.ctwnal h1gh school tour - Green (3-15 ) at Ironton
namen l.!;.
Sixty~nme southern Ohio
One So utheastern Ohw teams in three d1v1s1Dn• ,11, AA
League quintet and one and AAA) hit the f1rm g lme on
Southern Vall ey Athlellc Feb 21. Only 41 remamed alive
Conference squad will see today m the "lose and out"
acllon as confident Ironton (7- post-season event as 28 fell by
11) takes on powerful South
the ways1de durmg last week's
first round actwn
F1ve of seven AAA teams are
ahve, 16 of 24 AA teams are
still m the runnmg and 20 o( 38
A squads are still seekmg ·
•
sectional titles and berths m

OU needs

wzn over

Fa leo ns
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
Umversity needs a win over
Bowlmg Green Saturday to
wrap up lhe light MidAmerican Conference race .
But if Bowling Green wins, and
also Toledo, that would throw
the league into a three-way tie,
necessitating a chanapionsh1p
playoff.
MAC CommlSSlOner Fred
Jacoby sa1d Tuesday if a playoff is necessary, 1t would be
played March 4 and 6 al St.
John's Arena on the Ohio Stale
University campus.
01:: currently leads the
league with an 8-3 record, while
BG and Toledo are 7-4.
An OU wm would give the
Bobcats a 9-3 record and an
NCAA tournament b1d.
But if Bowlmg Green wms,
and Toledo defeat.&lt;; Kent Slate,
all three would wind up with 8-3
league records.
Should Bowling Green wm
and Toledo lose to Kent, that
would put Bowling Green and
Ohw U in a tie for the title.
The Falcons would gel the
NCAA bid because they won
both season games from Oh10
University, and OU and Toledo
could hope for a berth either m
the NIT or the new Colleg1ate
Commissioner's Association
tournament m St. Louis.

Tornados, Eagles
.
open tourflament
The Meigs G1rls Invitational
Basketball Tournament gets
under way this evening m the
Larry R Morrison Gym nasium as the Eastern Eagles
take on the Southern Tornados
begmmng at 6 p.m
The f1ve-team tourney
reswnes action Friday, when
the wmner of the Eastern Southern battle meets the
rugged Gallipolis Blue Angels,
followed by the Meigs
Marauder - Kyger Creek
Bobcat battle.
The losers of the two Fnday
games will meet Monday at 4
p.Ql. in the consolation g.ame,
with the wmners of Fnday's
contests meeting in the
champ10nsh1p game at 6 p.m.
AdmissiOn lo the games is 75
cents for adults and 50 cents for
students.
2-3-7. Totals 15-11-41.
Southern (37) - Roush 1-0-2;
Boso 6-3-12; Dunning 2-0-4;
Johnston 1-0-2; Bass 3-1-7;
Spaun 1-0-2; H11l 3-U. Totals
17-3-37.
Kyger Creek ( 45) - Swisher
5-1-11; Salem 2-0-4 ; Brown 1-02; Baylor 3-U; Baird 3-0-6;
Lucas 2-2~. Sands W-il. Totals
20-5-45

Symmes Valley (27) Kelley 4-1-9; Wilson 3-0-6;
Geswem 1-0-2; Myers 0-1-1 ;
Miller 0-1-1; Stumbo 1-0-2;
Clary 244; Miller 1-0-2. Totals
12-3-27
Off1cials - Mel Carter and
John Milhoan

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10 A.M. lo8 P.M.

wee k's d1 s tnct tour~
naments
In other games mvolving
area AA teams tomght .
Shendan
( 10-8)
meets
Nelsonville-York (12-7) al
Stewart Northwest 11-16 1
battles powerful Wheelersburg
(14-5) at Lucasv1lle. At Unioto,
Southern
Ohio
League
champiOn Washington Court
House 115-3) battles Oak H1ll
18-11).
In other Class A games
Huntington of Ross County (
15) mee:.S B1shop Flagel (12-9)
next

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at Ch1lhcothe; South Webster
( t5-6 I tackles Portsmouth East
(9-10) at Portsmouth and
Western of P1ke I 17-4 ) meets
Manchester (8-11) at Hillsboro.
Thursday, M1am1 Trace ( 117) defending AAA sectional and
district champion, w1ll take on
Manetta ( 13-liJ at Rio Grande's
Lyne Center On Friday, Logan
( 12-7) Will battle top-seeded
Ch1lhcothe ( 15-3 ) at Rio
Grande.
All tournament games start
at 7.30 p.m .

Wittenberg champion
Ohio College Basketball
By Uolled Press lnleroatlonal
Wittenberg University added
the Ohio Conference basketball
crown to the football title the
T1gers captured last fall w1th a
surpnsmgly
easy 62-48
conquest of Oh10 Northern
Tuesday night m the league
tournament champwnsh1p
game.
The T1gers, led by Jun Evans
With 18 point.&lt;; and Ed Ford Wllh
15 markers, now advance to the
NCAA Great Lakes regional
tournament al EvarJ&gt;ville, Ind.
Ohio Northern, paced by AI
Donhoff with 17 pmnts, finished

the season w1th an 18-6 record, w1th B1~ Ten rival Purdue.
The Boilermakers turned on
wh1Ie Wittenberg enters
their
scoring power to register
tournannenl play with a 20-:l
mark.
a 99~ wm over BG for their
M1d-Amencan Conference 17th VIctory m 25 ganaes this
leader Ohio Umversity got an year behind an 18-poinl scormg
outstanding scoring per- performance from Bruce
formance from sophomore Parkinson. Three other Purdue
guard Walter Luckett m a 7~9 starters scored 1n double
f1gures.
wm over Penn Slate.
The Falcons dropped to 15-10
Luckett scorched the nets for
37 pmnts to help the Bobcats for the season.
In other games Tuesday
push the1r season record to 1510. Penn State dropped to 14-11. night, Wilmington took a 98-89
Bowling Green, second in the win over Cedarville and Wright
MAC standmgs w1th one Stale outscored Thomas More
conference game left to play, (Ky.), 80-68.
didn't fare as well in a contest

Wolfpack defeats Tarheels
By United Press lnteroatlooal
Tommy Burleson had
himself a ball.
Burleson, the 7-fool-4 center
for top ranked North Carolma
State, scored 22 points and
pulled down II of h1s team's 38
rebounds Tuesday night to lead
the Wolfpack past arch-rival
North Carolina 83-72.
The VIctory, a record 29th in
a row m conference play for
Stale, enabled the Wolfpack to
clmch the Atlantic Coast
regular season title and w1th 1l
a f1rst round bye m next week's
posl~eason tourney that will
determine the ACC's representative in' the NCAA tournament. The wm also upped
N.C. State's overall record for
the season to 23-1 w1th the lone
loss coming at the hands of
third ranked UCLA in
December.
"I JUSt gave the game hall to
Burleson," said coach Norm
Sloan after his team's triumph
over the Tar Heels. "I've never
done that before in my entire
coaching career. He was truly
the best big man out there
tomght . Sure we have Dav1d
(Thompson) and Monte
(Towe) but w1thoul the big
man 1t would be awfully
tough."
"This IS the greatest Stale
team I've ever seen/' com·
mented North Carolina coach
Dean Smith whose fourth
ranked Tar Heels lost for only
the fourth lime in 24 games this
season with three of the setbacks supplied by the Wolfpack. "They pressed us real
well on defense throughout the

game."
Sloan Praises Team
North Carolina was highly
motivated and the first half
was unbelievably tough, but
our boys hung in there and

played a great second half,"
added Sloan whose learn
finishes 11.&lt;; regJJiar season
Saturday against Wake Forest.
Burleson tallied 19 of his
points in the second haU when
N.C. State rallied from a 34-32
intermission deficit. Thompson
fimshed With 21 points and
Rivers had 19 for the Wolfpack
while Walter Davis paced the
Tar Heels with 18.
North Carolina took a 40-34
lead after tilree rmnules of the
second half before Burleson got
hot, hilling for 11 points as the
Wolfpack out.&lt;;cored the Tar
Heels 23-6 during the next eight
minutes lo take a corhmanding
&gt;7-46 lead.
Only three other learns
ranked m the UPf Top Twenty
were m acllon with second
ranked Notre Dame overwhelming Ball State 9~9, 14th
ranked Kansas beatmg
Nebraska 51-46 and 15th ranked
Kansas State edging Missouri
69~7 .

Shumale 's 31 Points
All-America candidate John
Shumate scored 31 pomt.&lt;; and
had 15 rebounds for Notr~
Dame as the Irish, with two
regular season games remammg, upped their record to
23-1. Adrian Dantley added 26
pomls to the Notre Dame offense while Chris Collins led
Ball State with 18 points .
Kansas outscored Nebraska
14-2 midway through the
second haU to down the Cornhuskers and keep it.&lt;; B1g
Eight title hopes alive. The
Jayhawks trail first place
Kansas State by a half game as
the Wildcats used Lon Kruger's
two free throws with nine
seconds left to nip Missouri.
Texas Tech and Texas
remained tied for the lead in
the Southwest Conference as

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and Mrs. P~ul Ervin, Wayne
Ervin, Mary F. C1rde, Mr;, and
Mrs . Clarence Napper, Mr and
Mrs G A Deem, Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Evans , Racine Grange

2606, M.-

Good Thru Sat.,Mar. 2nd.At
A&amp;PWEO. Limit One Coupon

-..

.. .

3- The Dally S.ntmel, Mlddlei&gt;Oi'l-Pomeroy, 0 ., ~'eb 27, 1974

Coupon

u -..

Jim Anderson, Mr
Jake Lee, Mr . and

Morris , Mr and Mrs Fntz
Buck ,
and
Pentecostal

HITIL0

PEANUT lUTTER

Jr .. Mr and Mrs Ralph Ours,
M.-. and Mrs. Ronald Hart, Mr.

and Mrs
and Mrs

Coupon

Good Thru Sat., Mar. 2nd. At
A&amp;P WEO. Limit One Coupon

GOV'T INSPECTED

Contributors
are annonnced
~ACI N E Latest con
tnbutors to a fund to purchase
Rae 1ne's new emergency
ambulance are
Mr . and Mrs. Bill McKelvey,
Mr and Mrs Jun1or Ne1gler,
Fern Gaul, Mr and Mrs Tom
Theiss. Racine Gas Co., Mr.
and Mrs. John R. Lee, Calvin
Orr, Warren G. Rose, Mr and
Mrs Clifford Holter, Mr . and
Mrs. Emmett Stethen, Mr. and
Mrs. James Ray Lawrence,
Mr and Mrs . Freeland Norns,
Mr- and Mrs Fred E. R1tch1e,
Mr and Mrs Grover Salser,

~upCMtal

Prices Good Thru Sat., March 2nd

Rocks shown to children

I'

Clip "'fMa&amp;

"SUPER-RIGHT" SMOKED

WELL TRIMMED

..

One p1cture he needs is a canary b1rd, from a get-well card,
embroidery pattern or some similar Item. The second photo he
needs IS of Wounded Knee. Both photos or p1clures must be al '
least four by four mches or can go up to eight by 10. John would
apprec1ale a helping hand so 1! you can supply 1t, give him a ring
at 992-3911

j

.. .

!

Superbly styled in the Thunderbird Tradition.
Value packed with standard features found in
cars costing thousands more. 114" wheelbase,
only 213 .6" overall 351 cu. in . engine or larger .

Luxury In A Small Package
Ford- Largest Makers of
Small Cars In The World
See Fred Blaettnar, Danny Thompson,
or Keith Goble

Keith Goble Ford, Inc.
Middleport, Ohio

.I

I

I

I

both canae through w1lh VIC·
tories. The Red Raiders' Rick
Bullock hit for 41 points to lead
Tech past TCU 77~ whlle
Texas thumped Arkansas 9982. SMU remamed one game
behind the co-leaders with one
game left by lrirruning R1ve 11979.
LaSalle beat Delaware 7~9
and Lafayette got by American
University &gt;9-55 in the opening
round of the Middle Atlanbc
Conference playoffs
College Basketball Results
By United Press International
Playoffs
Middle
Atlantic
Corllerence
Playoff (1st round)
LaSalle 78 Delaware 69
Lfaytt 59 Amrcn U 55

EaSI
Hartw1ck 71 Montcta1r St 6-t
Rochester Tech 1M Elm i ra 73
Northeastern 88 Boston U 78
Connect1cut 77 Boston Coli 69
Brown 83 Rhode I sland 68
Barrmgton 76 N1chots 61
New Hampsh1re 63 Dartmouth
61

W1ll1ams 120 Clark &lt;Mass 1 87
Westfield 71 North Adam s 50
Kmg•s (NY) 77 Blmlld 70
Salem St 83 Frmnghm St 57
St J fN v J 98 H Cross 71
Bloomsburg 115 York (Pa J 70
CCNY 72York (NY l 58
St Lawrence 60 Colgate 49
Rnsslr Poly 102 Ham11ton 73
Seton Hall 75 V1tlanova 62
Tufts 83 Tr1n1ly (Conn l 66
Albright 84 Wash (Md J 67
Pratt 79 Concordia ( N Y l 67
Wesleyan 83 Brandeis 77
Eastern Nazarene 76 Nasson 71
Adelphi 88 Brooklyn Coli 80
Soulh
N Car St 83 N Car 72
Randolph Ma con 79 Mdsn 65
Transy l vania 9.:1 lnd SEt 83
Fla Sf 86 FDU (Rthrfrd} 58
Midwest
Notre Dame 93 Ball St 69
Oh 10 u. 78 Penn St 59
Wrrght St 80 Thomas More 68
Valparaiso 121 Wabash 74
Wilmington 98 Cedarville 89
Kansas St 69 Mlssovrl 67
Purdue 99 Bowl1ng Green 83
Kansas 51 Nebraska .:16
Kansas St 69 Missouri 67
Southwest
McMurry 86 Texas Wesleyan 67
SMU 89 Rt ce 79
Texas 99 Arkansas 82
Tu:as A&amp;M 94 Baylor 72
Texas Tech 77 TCU 66
up1 02 -27 02.19 aed
v
vlydsv
WHAstgs 2-27
WHA Standings
By Unrled Press International
East
w 1 t pts
gf ga
New Eng! 33 26 2 68 219 203
Toronto
32 28 4 68 248 222
Quebec
32 28 3 67 239 219
Clevel
Chrcago

28 27
27 29

Jersey

26

5 61
3 57

3&lt;~ 2 54
West

w. 1. 1. pts

192
192

uta h
Indiana
San A nton1o

Denver

w I pet g b
42 24 636 39 25 609
2
42 29
22 43

592
338

21h
19 1J,

17 50 254 2W?
We s t
w 1• pet . 9 b
~ ! ~j 647 522
B'h

J l 33
30 35

500 10

462 12'1
29 38 433 14 ,11,
,
uesday s Res ults
San D 1ego 126 V 1rg1n1a 119
l nd1ana 110 Utah 9d
\O nly games sc hedu l ed I
Wednesday's Games
San Anton io at New York
V1rgm1a a t Ken tu cky
lnd1ana a! Denver
San D1ego v s Caro 11na
at Gr eensboro
(Only games sc hedul ed )
San D 1e go
T

i~ l: ~:; ~::

Phoen1 x
25 d2 373 13
Portland
21 45 JI B 16' ,
Tuesday' !i Res ulh
L os Ang 119 Buffa lo ll2
New York 85 Cap 1tal 71
Hou ston 118 KC Omaha 101
Bos to n 86 0!!-lr OI I eJ
Phil a 118 Port laM 100
G Stat e 120 Phoen 1x 100
(O nly games sc hedu lecO
W e dnesday 's Games
Buffalo vs Bos t on
a t Prov1den ce
KC Oma h a at Atlanta

Seat tl e at Cap 1tal

L os Ang at Milwaukee

Ch1cago at Phoen 1x
!O nly gam es sche duled)

Amenc.an Ho ckey
Le a gu e Standmg s
By Un1ted Press Jnternat tona l
North
NBA Slandmgs
w I I pi s gf g a
By Un1ted Press lnternatronal
Roc hes ter
]4 17 10 18 204 204
Ea stern Conference
PrOviden ce 33 23 8 14 2!1 1 205
Atlan11c Dtvts 1on
w
1. pet g b . New Haven 3 1 21 10 72 217 203
Nova Scot1a 28 23 10 66 213 183
Boston
d S 17
726
New Yo r k
4126 612
6 1 1 Sprmgf1 eld 13 3 1 13 d) 187 253
17 36 9 43 1!19 2&lt;~8
Buffalo
35 3.:1 507 l)lf ? Boston
South
Phil a
20 .:16 30 3 27
w I t pts gf ga
Central DIVISIOn
Hers h ey
32 19 10 74 252 194
w
I pet g b
Bal l1m or e 33 20 8 74 244 189
Ca p1ta l
37 29 561
Atla nta
28 39 418
91'2 C1nc mna i1 33 10 1 73 217 186
V 1rg 1n1a '
20 33 8 48 175 7',19
Hous ton
26 d 1 388 11lfl Ja
cks onv1l le
Cleveland
23 47 329 16
20 36 ] 47 187 263
Western Conference
Rtchmond
17 34 8 42 174 246
Mrdwest DIVISIOn
Tuesday 's Resl!tt s
w. I pet g b Ba l t1 mor
e 2 Boston 2
Milwaukee
.:18 11 738
Jacksonville &lt;I V1rgm1a 3
Ch 1cago
46 22 676
J l! 2
(On l y games scheduled )
De trort
4d 24 647
5117
Today's Game s
KC Omaha
26 43 377 24
Vlrgm•a at Cmcmnat1
PaCifiC DIVISIOn
w I pet g b . R• chmond at H er shey
Spr1nQf 1eld at N ew H aven
G Stat e
36 27 57 1

the day after .

• •

by the editor
Two sports-related subjects come lo mmd today, maybe
because Saturday mghl two sport.&lt;;-minded old acquamtances
shook my hand Saturday al dinner "Ulken out "One was Hubert
Price of Portland who must be about my age but doesn't look 1t,
and the other Bill McKelvey ,also of Portland, who does look 11 (if
you will pardon me, Bill).
Both of these men fathered outstanding athletes in what 1s
now the Southern Local School District. Bona fide basketball
stars were B1lly and MarVIn McKelvey and Sam and Larry
Price, the IaUer also a fine lefthanded pitcher for Racine H1gh
and Marietta College.
All but Billy McKelvey are in educaUon: Marvin m the Me1gs
Local District, and Sam and Larry Pr1ce elsewhere. Bllly 1s a
prosperous Insurance agent in the Boston, Mass area. Bruce, the
McKelvey's third son-agamsl no daughters- is at home More
about Sam and Larry Price will have to come later.
Because they were of the same era, the McKelveys and
Pr1ces recalled the welcomed promotion this week of Terry
Ohlinger, about 29, to the superintendency of the Franklin Local
School District (Philo, Ohio).
Terry, a fine Pomeroy High School athlete-basketball and
baseball-earned a starting role as a sophomore on the
basketball team. He went on lo play three seasons as a varSity
regular al Pomeroy, but never played at Ohio U where he took
his degree in Physical Education and later hu; master's in administration. Terry came back to Meigs Local to teach and ass1st
in basketball coach under Carl WoUe . He went to Philo as
assistant principal and had moved up to the head cha1r before
being named superintendent.
Terry decided to come out for baseball m hiS senior year al
Pomeroy. As a wrong~ide pitcher he was unusually effectlve as
the Panthers had another of their winning seasons under coach
Russ Moore, now the Meigs Local Junior High principaL
It's too had Terry got away from Me1gs LocaL But it's
Franklin Local's good fortune
THE OTHER SPORTSY ITEM is how Hobart Wilson Jr ,
editor of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune, is known throughout the
middle Ohio Valley for his total dedication to "Sports" came to
be known in earlier years as "Rafters" W1lson. Wilson's
daughter, Brenda, a junior at GAHS is an outstanding performer
on the Blue Angels basketball team. Brenda is also a fine
trumpeter in the Blue Devil band, but that, too, is another story.
Dad Wilson one day recently, toting up daughter Brenda's
shooting percentage from the floor, recalled how he got the
name, Rafters.
It was in the 1949-SO basketball season that Dad Wilson,
playing a guard in the reserves as a sophomore il) the old
Washington School gym, got off a last second shot against
Middleport from near rmd-court m a desperate attempt to snatch
VICtory from defeat.
"That shot went so high," he chuckled, "1t bounced aroond m
the rafters. I thoughtit never would come down."
From that day he was known as Rafters W1lson.

GOLDEN GLOVES
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
annual Columbus Golden
Gloves boxing tournament
finals will be held here
Saturday, March 9. This
week's activity is slated for the
Lausche Building on the Ohio
State Fairgrounds, with the
March 9 finals slated for Ohio
Slate's St. John Arena.

WINNING CHICK
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Cap1lal University's Vince
Chickeretla has a record of 113
wins and 33 losses in his s1x
years at the school, the third
best winning percentage (.744)
among the NCAA's college
Wviston coaches.
Capital is 59-14 m the Ohio
Conference and 53-ii at home
during Chickerella 's regune .

197
204

193 '235

gl

Houston 38 18 5 81 248
M lnnesot 33 26 1 67 241
wmn1peg 29 29 5 63 206
Edmontn 30 30 0 60 207
vancouvr 23 37 0 46 225
LOS Ang
21 110 0 112 178
Tuesday's Results
Hovston 3 Vancouver 2
Quebec 7 Wmnlpeg 1
Chicago A Los Ang 2
fOnly games scheduled }
Wednesday's Games
Los Ang at Mmnesota
Toronto at New England
{Only games scheduled)

u•

161
208
226
216
253
24.4

MAC LEADERS
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - Walt
Luckett of Ohio University, despite seeing his average drop
off the last .few games, has
clinched the Mid-American
Conference scoring race with
an average of 22.5 points per
game. Second to Luckett is Miarm's Phil Lumpkin at 17.8.
The leading rebounder Is
Kent Stale's Bradley Robinson
at 15.8 per game, while Paul
Griffin of Western Michigan
leads m field goal accuracy
with a .596 mark and
Bowling Green's Jeff Montgomery is the top free throw
shooter at .841 per cent (6!J.82).

Factory Retreads ,

Plus Federal Tax of 82c Per Tire
Mounting, No Charge

•Plus Recappable Tire
•AnY Size - Passenger Car Tire
MEIGS TIRE CENTER
700 E. Main St.

POMEROY, OHIO
992-2101

�• 1 •

:

•

' •

.•

.-

•

~ - The Daily Sentinel, Midclleport-Pomecoy. 0 .. Feb. 27. 1974

' $785,000 in Appalachia Funds. · prog ram again this year. The
The voca tiona! board of prog ram will be held at Rio
education in other rna trers Grande College.
The board tab led emjoined the Ohi o School Board
ployme
nt of a mainrenance
. Association, designared travel
superv
isor. Mrs. Ma r gar et
rates for admin istra tive
'J'ht vocational cenwr will be
personnel traveling outsi de the Kelly, clerk, adminiswred the
lln1nued fllrough $1,961,600 district
and agreed to sponsor oa th of office to Roy Hamilton
lu ~V i.! dO by the state,
an adult law e nforceme nt of Wellston.
=1.1~""' in local taxation and

Don King awarded Voc-Ed bid
$3,188.668. Kitchen equipment
will be bidded later.
Accord ing to Superintendent

Don King Construction of
•Jack son Tucsd&lt;l}' night was

award ed the ge neral ~ On·
•; t rut"linn l'tm tr·a l'l for the
! ~u l'kC~l' Hills l'ttn•t•r C(' nk r
or Calli a J &lt;H k ,,, p ;1Th \ Vill fnn

"'

· 11\ln t lc~·

T ilt'

Ol; il('d ~ J . :li''.

\

Cl :m:~ n cr

E Thomp~'on the
buildings will l'ust $24..15 per
~qu: n ·l' f lHll

('ufl sl r ur tinn will

J;l l ~ ~· ' I I' '

MASON - Flossie F 1'. , ., ,."
77,
Mason, died Mur P·
a l J,
, !'US I u. , .•-,285.
West I-:ncl Electric of Ports- Pleasant Valley Hospital. Jllro.
Bowen was born July 26, 1896,
mouth was the low bidder for
at
Roa ne County, W. Va ., the
the electrical work at $614.160. ,
The overa ll construction of the da ughter of the late Tom and
Martha Je tt Eppling . She was
three building campus will be
also preceded in death by her
'"·.C: at

husband, Henry . Mrs. Bowen

I

LA rally

was employed al Goodyear
Tire anti Rubber Co., Akron.

(Continued from pa ge 21

Marietta JC
group comzng

Detroit. John Havlicek scored
a game-lligh 26 points for
Boston. Dave Bing paced the
Pistons with 22.
K11ieks 85, Bullets 71
New York held the opposition
to a season low as Walt Frazier
led the Knicks with 21 points
and Earl Monroe netted 19.
Dave DeBusschere, recovering
from a bruised heel, tallied 16
and collected 15 rebounds .
Kevin Porter was high for
Capital with 17 points.
Rockets liS, Kings !0 I
Rudy Tomjaoovich scored 30

I
I

I
I

\

poinl~

wdl '

np11.

offi ciating. Fri ends may call at

the funera l home today from 2
to 4 and 7 to 9. Following
Thursday's services the body
will be taken to the Davis
Weaver Fu neral Home in
Clarksburg where friends may
call from 7 to 9. Services will be
held there Friday. Buria l wjll ·
be in Sunset Memoria l Park

-

phase of the constructi on were

D&amp;D

M,..,!J':fl'lte

Gray Colt on Prints
Ke ttle Cloth &amp; Sharkskin
wi th Ma tching Dotted Swiss
and "Litt le People" Pr ints

Funera l serv ices for Mike
Clark, 16, Pleasant Ridge,
Pomeroy , who died last Friday
at
Ch i ldr e n's
Hospital,
Col umbus. will be held Friday
at 1 p.m. at Ewi ng Funeral

Home with the Rev . Robert

The regu lar bi-mon thly
Kuhn off icia ting .
The youth died from an
meeting of the Meigs Coun ty
apparen
t high fever, possibly
Jaycees will be held tonight at
pneumonia An aut opsy wa s
8 at Pomeroy Vi llage HaiL
reported being performed
The Marietta Jaycees will
today .
He is survived by his
visit the loca l chapwr, and there.
paren ts, Gene and Evelyn
Mar ietta Pres iden t Enos
Clark ; two brothers , William
Singer will conduct the fourth
Davi d Clark, Cheyenne, Wyo .,
an d Roger Steven Clark ,
lesson of the LIA 1Leadership
TWO DRAWFINES
Rantoulo, Ill., his ma ternal
in Action) course, sta rling at 7
Two defenda nts were fined g r andfathe r , Thomas Cook ,
p.m . before the regular and another forfeited bond in Pomeroy, and paterna l grandmeeting .
Middl eport Mayo r J oh n fat her, Ernes t Clar k, Rac ine .
was a sophomore at
There will also be a board of Zerkle's court Tuesday night. Mike
Meigs Hig h School.
directors meeting irrunediately Fined were Robert H. Burson,
Friends may cal l at the
afwr the regular meeting. All 40, Shacle, $150 and costs, three funera l home aft er 10 a.m. on
. Bur ia l wi ll' be i n
members
and
guests, days confinement, and Jeffrey Thursday
Letar t Fa its Cemetery.
especially those taking the LIA D. Boggs, 23, Middleport, $100
course, are invited.
and costs, three days conAny young man between the finement, each on charges of
ages of 18 and 35 who is in- driving while intoxicated. John
terested in se rving Meigs Jeffers, no age and no address
County
and
developin g recorded, forfeited a $50 bond
leadership quali ties is welcome on charges of assaul t and
to join the Jaycees.
battery.

club won its eighth game in the
last II outings. The winners hit
for 55.6 per cent as the Rockets
grabbed the lead fo r good with
2: 26 1eft to play in the first half.
76ers 118, Trail Blazers 110
Tom Van Arsdale and Fred
Carter combined for 51 points
as Philadelphia held off a
fourth quarter Portland
challenge. Geoff Petrie scored
32 points for the Trail Blazers,
who lost their 22nd game in the
last 24 contests.
Q's 126, Squires 119
Flynn Robinson came off the
bench to score 25 po ints and
Travis Grant tallied 32 as San
Diego rallied to beat Virginia.
An 11-0 surge by the Q's
starting the fourth quarter
ruined the Squires, who received 29

envelopes .
The school

Funeral set

to Pom eroy

points as a surging Houston

'
'

bids. Mrs. Margaret Kelly,
board clerk, opened the s o.~- ~

Flossie Bowen of Mason dies

nf

(' ~ ,.' ( I ' ]

and King Contracting of
Jackson, $2.012.400.
Other compunies bidding on
the plumbing, heating etc.

strutted on 46.1J ·~~ :~ t
Juli an Spea r, ll cs t Way , merly owned by W. : .• .:••.n,~'";l;
nf Pomeroy RFD. $t,99:1,590, Wa verly Pipi ng Company and in Raccoon Twp. n. i..: • w~ ..
Cha pu wn Corp. Other elec- purdliw last Febntll ". ltnm
trical conl.r;l(:turs submitting
for $50.005. It is
Ill eoclion 21 of Racbids were Wente and James si
e• . r·~ .;. n ·~ar Rt . 554.
Eleclrk
',_,, l'" :wvears.
Bids were opelll!d at noon
1 .Sue is surv1 ve d by a
Tuesday in lhr Vocationa l
daughter, Mrs. Mildred Wei!, BoarJ of Education Office at
I )on 't H1! A
Clarksburg, W. Va.: thr"" Rio Grande.
sisters , Nannie Isabe ll e
Bill Stubbs of Ditmar Uum /1 llwmy!
Caston, Mason, and Dorothy Stubbs, archiwct. read the
Givens, (llld Orpha Givens, bids. Ponney Cisco, 1irector of
both of Akron: three grand- the Buckeye Hi lls Career
ch il dren, and two great - Center. and Richard Ditmar of
Sew yo ur East er Outfit
grandchildren .
now. Double knit prints
Oitma r~~tubbs, tabulated the
~... uneral services will be held
wi th ma tching solids.
Thursday at 10:30 a.m. at the
f'oglesong Funeral Home with
the Rev . Chester Tennant
$1,920,500; Karr Constructi on

IJ1 tl

li ' ln's

l:l

I

begin immediately .
Other bidders on the ~cncra l
contract were Knowton Construction of Bellefontaine .

'

USDA
CHOICE

The Kn icks downed the
Lakers 20-19, and the Celtics
topped the Bucks 21-17 Tuesday
night in Meigs in tram ural
basketball.
The Knicks were paced by
Dan Thomas with ll points,
while Joe Pra twr contributed 3
and Chris Woods, Cletus Bego
and Dan Carmen got 2 each.
The Lakers were paced by
Fra nk Haggy and Ed Nottingham each with 8 points and
Mark Atkins a dded 2 and Jim

Indiana won its seventh
straight and Utah lost its fifth
in a row as Mel Daniels tallied
25 points and grabbe d 17
rebounds lor the Pacers. Willie
Wise kept the Stars in contention with 37 points .

Se w ,
P.S.:
Kwik
McCa
ll
Simpli city &amp;
Pattern s.

•

•

•

$

4 lb .
3 lb.
2 lb.
3 lb.
2 lb.
1 lb.

$

CHU CK RO AST
S IRL OIN ST E AK
STE W ME AT
GROUN D BEEF
SLI CE D BA CO N
HAM SA LAD

•
-..

z

..

9....

-

ICIJ::

c

1.1.1
ICIJ::

(,:,

$

c~ -

-

2 lb. SLI CED BACON
5 lb. CHUCK ROA ST

992-3502

WE ACCEPT F

-

CASH, CHARGE,

Snider I.
Cliff Kennedy poured in 9
points in the Celtic triumph
while Nottingham and Jerry
Fields added 4 each, and Bego
and Mark Atkins hit 2 each.
The Bucks were paced by
Haggy with 6 points fo llowed
by Carma n with 5, Ric k
Blaettner with 4 and Wood with
2. Thursday, the Knicks will
lace the Lakers at 7 p.m., with
the Celtics and Bucks clashing
at 8.

DOLLAR
WOMEN'S EASY CARE
COTTON/ AVRIL SHIFTS

I '

(i)

REGU LAR ' 2 .97
Relax . , .wear com fortable
sleeveless ~ h , f t s mode of
o.n eas y core co tt on/Av ri l '
bl end . Choose fro m 3 cos·
val style s o t co n1ro s ti ng
binding, bu Hon and snap
trim. Sizes S.M.L.Xl 8·4 0 .

7

97~

Sliced
lb.

MORTON HOUSE
121f2 oz.
Salisbury Steak
can

Beef &amp; Gravy
Pork &amp; Gravy

2

bag

53¢

e

ARMOUR

CHILl/BEANS
16 oz. 49~ '
can

19~

ARMOU R

OUI()WNIIANO

!RIPLE,«!CHECK.

SAVE •
SKEINS

.

$1 .·

Skeins

yarn s in a rayon/co tton b lend.
70
ya r ds to a skein. Popu l ar colors .

~!'~'oz. 69~

2

~~~~l- 99~

67c
POUND

SWEETHEART

Fabric' Softener
46 ounce
plastic jug

=

.....
en

c
u 0
0- a::
::c

Lovab le pl oymote for

o ny chi ld ... soft cu ddly medi um pile plu sh
rabbit with white sa·
t ir. l1ned ea(S.

Ill

Pink/

w h ite and blue/wh ite .

u
''
·.. , _-.... ·, ·,-.

. . .·
~ .· · ·..
9'x12' ROOM SIZE RUG
Tick Tulfed
"' carpeting .

dee p

pile

Reg. $31. 44
Now Only

f ig hts

•.

coVities

and promotes
c lean brea th.

•21 44

... =
~

en

. . 00
5;

96 --,~--=:\~£
$2,.03

Mu rp hy 's quali ty fast co lor so ft spun

LITE TUNA·

2 49¢..

en

REGULAR '9.99

Create th o t sp ecia l yarn pre fect w ith

REG. 79' PICK-A-MIX CANDY

oz.

EACH

FALCON
SKY HUNUA
40" WING SPAN

SKEIN

CORNED
BEEF HASH

6
pkgs.

)

GIANI COIIONIAIL PLAYMAII
SUPER 30" HIGH AND 26" LONG

27•

CANDY DEPT. SPECIAL

JELLO

v

~

97~

f

REG. 42•-RAYON/COTTON
DECORATOR RUG YARNS

DEL MONTE CHUNK

ALL FAVORS

--

Easy to inflate and f ly! Falcon
has dare-devi I bat st yle wings.

ON 4

GRAVY MIX

-

MOD-FUN INFLATABLE KITES

68'

FRANK ' S HOME STYLE

-

DELIGHT

STRAWBERRY
PRESERVES

69

-----

tups and maTch ing solid, long le-g, elas Tic wais t
bottoms . .. todd ler 's i· 4, child's 4 -8. 1,-do n l' s I·
piece long sleeve. footed print sleepers, :,izcs 6· ,a.

KRAFT

1a oz.
Jar

-

Fa ntas y dreams begin in Murp h y' ! .children's sleep·
weor .
Br ig ht p c1 jnmo se ts w /short Sleeve, print

FRENCH FRIES
lb.

-

J99

s-.v£
3G'
to .
L---:!--'9!-' . •

Froze11 Buy!

79~

-

."

FLAME RE·IARDANI KNII
CHILDREN'-$ PAJAMAS

'

GARDEN

-

enI

5 79¢

HOME MADE
HAM SALAD

-

INCLUDES
REGULAR
AND EXTRA
SIZES

lb.
Bag

1 05

-

2 for'S

GRAPEFRUIT

SLAB BACON

PULL OUT FROM YOUR PAPER - USE AS SHOPPING GUIDE AT M&amp;R
- ----- - --------- - - FO.LD HERE·- - - ----- - - --- - - - ------ --------- -- -------------- - -- --- --

..
·-- - - - - - - -

FLORIDA

. TEETER'S

cc

.,::::»

•'

LIMIT 2 '

AND SAV15 'I'HE EASY WAY-CHARGE

. .SILVER· BRIDGE PLAZA - BOTH DOWNTOWN GALLIPOUS STORES - PT. PLEASANT

-

'

c

2 lb.· BULK SA USAGE
3 lb . PORK CHOP S
2 lb. CUBE STEAK
2 lb. LA RGE F RANKS

Produce Buy!

'-

:

Wieners
2 lb. $1 59

'h SE MI SONLE SS HAM
(6 -7 1b . Avg .l

(413)

I

SHOP EARLY WHi lE
QU AN TI TI ES LAST

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU MARCH 2

7/8 oz.
pkg.

•

Phone Us (414 ) 3J lbib.. SGPARE
RouND BE E F
RIBS
3 lb. RI B ST EAK
Your 0 r der I
3 lb . s ljl LotN s TEAK .

&lt;i'. Atg . TM of fMC Co rp .

I'

,. •

1 FRES H CHI CK EN
3 lb . PORK ROAST
2 lb. GRO UND BEEF
2 lb. BULK SA USAGE
2 lb. RO UND STEAK
2 lb. STE W MEAT

Knicks and Celtics win

Eakins.
Pacers 110, Stars 94

lb.

•

LAY-AWAY

from Jim

Piece
lb.

830 E. Matn Pomeroy, Oh1 ~

Round Steak
$1 49 lb.

BEEF SIDES
lb. 99'
(411)
FRONTS
lb. 89'
HINDS
lb. $1.09 (412)
Prices
Include
Culling
Wr apping
and
Fr eez ing
Bee f Sold at
Hangi ng Weight.

Meat Distributor

....,

•

•
•

.'

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�• 1 •

:

•

' •

.•

.-

•

~ - The Daily Sentinel, Midclleport-Pomecoy. 0 .. Feb. 27. 1974

' $785,000 in Appalachia Funds. · prog ram again this year. The
The voca tiona! board of prog ram will be held at Rio
education in other rna trers Grande College.
The board tab led emjoined the Ohi o School Board
ployme
nt of a mainrenance
. Association, designared travel
superv
isor. Mrs. Ma r gar et
rates for admin istra tive
'J'ht vocational cenwr will be
personnel traveling outsi de the Kelly, clerk, adminiswred the
lln1nued fllrough $1,961,600 district
and agreed to sponsor oa th of office to Roy Hamilton
lu ~V i.! dO by the state,
an adult law e nforceme nt of Wellston.
=1.1~""' in local taxation and

Don King awarded Voc-Ed bid
$3,188.668. Kitchen equipment
will be bidded later.
Accord ing to Superintendent

Don King Construction of
•Jack son Tucsd&lt;l}' night was

award ed the ge neral ~ On·
•; t rut"linn l'tm tr·a l'l for the
! ~u l'kC~l' Hills l'ttn•t•r C(' nk r
or Calli a J &lt;H k ,,, p ;1Th \ Vill fnn

"'

· 11\ln t lc~·

T ilt'

Ol; il('d ~ J . :li''.

\

Cl :m:~ n cr

E Thomp~'on the
buildings will l'ust $24..15 per
~qu: n ·l' f lHll

('ufl sl r ur tinn will

J;l l ~ ~· ' I I' '

MASON - Flossie F 1'. , ., ,."
77,
Mason, died Mur P·
a l J,
, !'US I u. , .•-,285.
West I-:ncl Electric of Ports- Pleasant Valley Hospital. Jllro.
Bowen was born July 26, 1896,
mouth was the low bidder for
at
Roa ne County, W. Va ., the
the electrical work at $614.160. ,
The overa ll construction of the da ughter of the late Tom and
Martha Je tt Eppling . She was
three building campus will be
also preceded in death by her
'"·.C: at

husband, Henry . Mrs. Bowen

I

LA rally

was employed al Goodyear
Tire anti Rubber Co., Akron.

(Continued from pa ge 21

Marietta JC
group comzng

Detroit. John Havlicek scored
a game-lligh 26 points for
Boston. Dave Bing paced the
Pistons with 22.
K11ieks 85, Bullets 71
New York held the opposition
to a season low as Walt Frazier
led the Knicks with 21 points
and Earl Monroe netted 19.
Dave DeBusschere, recovering
from a bruised heel, tallied 16
and collected 15 rebounds .
Kevin Porter was high for
Capital with 17 points.
Rockets liS, Kings !0 I
Rudy Tomjaoovich scored 30

I
I

I
I

\

poinl~

wdl '

np11.

offi ciating. Fri ends may call at

the funera l home today from 2
to 4 and 7 to 9. Following
Thursday's services the body
will be taken to the Davis
Weaver Fu neral Home in
Clarksburg where friends may
call from 7 to 9. Services will be
held there Friday. Buria l wjll ·
be in Sunset Memoria l Park

-

phase of the constructi on were

D&amp;D

M,..,!J':fl'lte

Gray Colt on Prints
Ke ttle Cloth &amp; Sharkskin
wi th Ma tching Dotted Swiss
and "Litt le People" Pr ints

Funera l serv ices for Mike
Clark, 16, Pleasant Ridge,
Pomeroy , who died last Friday
at
Ch i ldr e n's
Hospital,
Col umbus. will be held Friday
at 1 p.m. at Ewi ng Funeral

Home with the Rev . Robert

The regu lar bi-mon thly
Kuhn off icia ting .
The youth died from an
meeting of the Meigs Coun ty
apparen
t high fever, possibly
Jaycees will be held tonight at
pneumonia An aut opsy wa s
8 at Pomeroy Vi llage HaiL
reported being performed
The Marietta Jaycees will
today .
He is survived by his
visit the loca l chapwr, and there.
paren ts, Gene and Evelyn
Mar ietta Pres iden t Enos
Clark ; two brothers , William
Singer will conduct the fourth
Davi d Clark, Cheyenne, Wyo .,
an d Roger Steven Clark ,
lesson of the LIA 1Leadership
TWO DRAWFINES
Rantoulo, Ill., his ma ternal
in Action) course, sta rling at 7
Two defenda nts were fined g r andfathe r , Thomas Cook ,
p.m . before the regular and another forfeited bond in Pomeroy, and paterna l grandmeeting .
Middl eport Mayo r J oh n fat her, Ernes t Clar k, Rac ine .
was a sophomore at
There will also be a board of Zerkle's court Tuesday night. Mike
Meigs Hig h School.
directors meeting irrunediately Fined were Robert H. Burson,
Friends may cal l at the
afwr the regular meeting. All 40, Shacle, $150 and costs, three funera l home aft er 10 a.m. on
. Bur ia l wi ll' be i n
members
and
guests, days confinement, and Jeffrey Thursday
Letar t Fa its Cemetery.
especially those taking the LIA D. Boggs, 23, Middleport, $100
course, are invited.
and costs, three days conAny young man between the finement, each on charges of
ages of 18 and 35 who is in- driving while intoxicated. John
terested in se rving Meigs Jeffers, no age and no address
County
and
developin g recorded, forfeited a $50 bond
leadership quali ties is welcome on charges of assaul t and
to join the Jaycees.
battery.

club won its eighth game in the
last II outings. The winners hit
for 55.6 per cent as the Rockets
grabbed the lead fo r good with
2: 26 1eft to play in the first half.
76ers 118, Trail Blazers 110
Tom Van Arsdale and Fred
Carter combined for 51 points
as Philadelphia held off a
fourth quarter Portland
challenge. Geoff Petrie scored
32 points for the Trail Blazers,
who lost their 22nd game in the
last 24 contests.
Q's 126, Squires 119
Flynn Robinson came off the
bench to score 25 po ints and
Travis Grant tallied 32 as San
Diego rallied to beat Virginia.
An 11-0 surge by the Q's
starting the fourth quarter
ruined the Squires, who received 29

envelopes .
The school

Funeral set

to Pom eroy

points as a surging Houston

'
'

bids. Mrs. Margaret Kelly,
board clerk, opened the s o.~- ~

Flossie Bowen of Mason dies

nf

(' ~ ,.' ( I ' ]

and King Contracting of
Jackson, $2.012.400.
Other compunies bidding on
the plumbing, heating etc.

strutted on 46.1J ·~~ :~ t
Juli an Spea r, ll cs t Way , merly owned by W. : .• .:••.n,~'";l;
nf Pomeroy RFD. $t,99:1,590, Wa verly Pipi ng Company and in Raccoon Twp. n. i..: • w~ ..
Cha pu wn Corp. Other elec- purdliw last Febntll ". ltnm
trical conl.r;l(:turs submitting
for $50.005. It is
Ill eoclion 21 of Racbids were Wente and James si
e• . r·~ .;. n ·~ar Rt . 554.
Eleclrk
',_,, l'" :wvears.
Bids were opelll!d at noon
1 .Sue is surv1 ve d by a
Tuesday in lhr Vocationa l
daughter, Mrs. Mildred Wei!, BoarJ of Education Office at
I )on 't H1! A
Clarksburg, W. Va.: thr"" Rio Grande.
sisters , Nannie Isabe ll e
Bill Stubbs of Ditmar Uum /1 llwmy!
Caston, Mason, and Dorothy Stubbs, archiwct. read the
Givens, (llld Orpha Givens, bids. Ponney Cisco, 1irector of
both of Akron: three grand- the Buckeye Hi lls Career
ch il dren, and two great - Center. and Richard Ditmar of
Sew yo ur East er Outfit
grandchildren .
now. Double knit prints
Oitma r~~tubbs, tabulated the
~... uneral services will be held
wi th ma tching solids.
Thursday at 10:30 a.m. at the
f'oglesong Funeral Home with
the Rev . Chester Tennant
$1,920,500; Karr Constructi on

IJ1 tl

li ' ln's

l:l

I

begin immediately .
Other bidders on the ~cncra l
contract were Knowton Construction of Bellefontaine .

'

USDA
CHOICE

The Kn icks downed the
Lakers 20-19, and the Celtics
topped the Bucks 21-17 Tuesday
night in Meigs in tram ural
basketball.
The Knicks were paced by
Dan Thomas with ll points,
while Joe Pra twr contributed 3
and Chris Woods, Cletus Bego
and Dan Carmen got 2 each.
The Lakers were paced by
Fra nk Haggy and Ed Nottingham each with 8 points and
Mark Atkins a dded 2 and Jim

Indiana won its seventh
straight and Utah lost its fifth
in a row as Mel Daniels tallied
25 points and grabbe d 17
rebounds lor the Pacers. Willie
Wise kept the Stars in contention with 37 points .

Se w ,
P.S.:
Kwik
McCa
ll
Simpli city &amp;
Pattern s.

•

•

•

$

4 lb .
3 lb.
2 lb.
3 lb.
2 lb.
1 lb.

$

CHU CK RO AST
S IRL OIN ST E AK
STE W ME AT
GROUN D BEEF
SLI CE D BA CO N
HAM SA LAD

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1.1.1
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$

c~ -

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2 lb. SLI CED BACON
5 lb. CHUCK ROA ST

992-3502

WE ACCEPT F

-

CASH, CHARGE,

Snider I.
Cliff Kennedy poured in 9
points in the Celtic triumph
while Nottingham and Jerry
Fields added 4 each, and Bego
and Mark Atkins hit 2 each.
The Bucks were paced by
Haggy with 6 points fo llowed
by Carma n with 5, Ric k
Blaettner with 4 and Wood with
2. Thursday, the Knicks will
lace the Lakers at 7 p.m., with
the Celtics and Bucks clashing
at 8.

DOLLAR
WOMEN'S EASY CARE
COTTON/ AVRIL SHIFTS

I '

(i)

REGU LAR ' 2 .97
Relax . , .wear com fortable
sleeveless ~ h , f t s mode of
o.n eas y core co tt on/Av ri l '
bl end . Choose fro m 3 cos·
val style s o t co n1ro s ti ng
binding, bu Hon and snap
trim. Sizes S.M.L.Xl 8·4 0 .

7

97~

Sliced
lb.

MORTON HOUSE
121f2 oz.
Salisbury Steak
can

Beef &amp; Gravy
Pork &amp; Gravy

2

bag

53¢

e

ARMOUR

CHILl/BEANS
16 oz. 49~ '
can

19~

ARMOU R

OUI()WNIIANO

!RIPLE,«!CHECK.

SAVE •
SKEINS

.

$1 .·

Skeins

yarn s in a rayon/co tton b lend.
70
ya r ds to a skein. Popu l ar colors .

~!'~'oz. 69~

2

~~~~l- 99~

67c
POUND

SWEETHEART

Fabric' Softener
46 ounce
plastic jug

=

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c
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0- a::
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Lovab le pl oymote for

o ny chi ld ... soft cu ddly medi um pile plu sh
rabbit with white sa·
t ir. l1ned ea(S.

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Pink/

w h ite and blue/wh ite .

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. . .·
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Tick Tulfed
"' carpeting .

dee p

pile

Reg. $31. 44
Now Only

f ig hts

•.

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and promotes
c lean brea th.

•21 44

... =
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5;

96 --,~--=:\~£
$2,.03

Mu rp hy 's quali ty fast co lor so ft spun

LITE TUNA·

2 49¢..

en

REGULAR '9.99

Create th o t sp ecia l yarn pre fect w ith

REG. 79' PICK-A-MIX CANDY

oz.

EACH

FALCON
SKY HUNUA
40" WING SPAN

SKEIN

CORNED
BEEF HASH

6
pkgs.

)

GIANI COIIONIAIL PLAYMAII
SUPER 30" HIGH AND 26" LONG

27•

CANDY DEPT. SPECIAL

JELLO

v

~

97~

f

REG. 42•-RAYON/COTTON
DECORATOR RUG YARNS

DEL MONTE CHUNK

ALL FAVORS

--

Easy to inflate and f ly! Falcon
has dare-devi I bat st yle wings.

ON 4

GRAVY MIX

-

MOD-FUN INFLATABLE KITES

68'

FRANK ' S HOME STYLE

-

DELIGHT

STRAWBERRY
PRESERVES

69

-----

tups and maTch ing solid, long le-g, elas Tic wais t
bottoms . .. todd ler 's i· 4, child's 4 -8. 1,-do n l' s I·
piece long sleeve. footed print sleepers, :,izcs 6· ,a.

KRAFT

1a oz.
Jar

-

Fa ntas y dreams begin in Murp h y' ! .children's sleep·
weor .
Br ig ht p c1 jnmo se ts w /short Sleeve, print

FRENCH FRIES
lb.

-

J99

s-.v£
3G'
to .
L---:!--'9!-' . •

Froze11 Buy!

79~

-

."

FLAME RE·IARDANI KNII
CHILDREN'-$ PAJAMAS

'

GARDEN

-

enI

5 79¢

HOME MADE
HAM SALAD

-

INCLUDES
REGULAR
AND EXTRA
SIZES

lb.
Bag

1 05

-

2 for'S

GRAPEFRUIT

SLAB BACON

PULL OUT FROM YOUR PAPER - USE AS SHOPPING GUIDE AT M&amp;R
- ----- - --------- - - FO.LD HERE·- - - ----- - - --- - - - ------ --------- -- -------------- - -- --- --

..
·-- - - - - - - -

FLORIDA

. TEETER'S

cc

.,::::»

•'

LIMIT 2 '

AND SAV15 'I'HE EASY WAY-CHARGE

. .SILVER· BRIDGE PLAZA - BOTH DOWNTOWN GALLIPOUS STORES - PT. PLEASANT

-

'

c

2 lb.· BULK SA USAGE
3 lb . PORK CHOP S
2 lb. CUBE STEAK
2 lb. LA RGE F RANKS

Produce Buy!

'-

:

Wieners
2 lb. $1 59

'h SE MI SONLE SS HAM
(6 -7 1b . Avg .l

(413)

I

SHOP EARLY WHi lE
QU AN TI TI ES LAST

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU MARCH 2

7/8 oz.
pkg.

•

Phone Us (414 ) 3J lbib.. SGPARE
RouND BE E F
RIBS
3 lb. RI B ST EAK
Your 0 r der I
3 lb . s ljl LotN s TEAK .

&lt;i'. Atg . TM of fMC Co rp .

I'

,. •

1 FRES H CHI CK EN
3 lb . PORK ROAST
2 lb. GRO UND BEEF
2 lb. BULK SA USAGE
2 lb. RO UND STEAK
2 lb. STE W MEAT

Knicks and Celtics win

Eakins.
Pacers 110, Stars 94

lb.

•

LAY-AWAY

from Jim

Piece
lb.

830 E. Matn Pomeroy, Oh1 ~

Round Steak
$1 49 lb.

BEEF SIDES
lb. 99'
(411)
FRONTS
lb. 89'
HINDS
lb. $1.09 (412)
Prices
Include
Culling
Wr apping
and
Fr eez ing
Bee f Sold at
Hangi ng Weight.

Meat Distributor

....,

•

•
•

.'

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�·-

..

~

...... .

'

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7- The Daily Sentin&lt;H, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 27, 1974

.,

Life's puz~le
almost solved

•
•

~

Classifieds Get Result!$!
WA~T ADS
INFORMATION

M

5 p

o~:;~f~~~~~blicatio"

cZ:.~~?~~\;~~adllnC;r~e~lions
be accepted until 9 a.m. for

will

Day

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-.....

SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - An authority orl
chemical evolution predicted tod&lt;:y that scientists
eventually will piece together the puzzle of life's
origin, starting from the basic chemical conditions
from which ?II life evolved.
Dr. Cyril Ponnamperuma, professo~ of
chemistry at the University of Maryland, satd so
much has been learned in biochemistry during the
past decade.or two that chemists have every right to
be optimistic they will Jearn all the secrets of the
start of life.

CCI

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Th ere is no reason to doubt
that we shall rediscover, one
by one, the physical and
chemical conditions which
once determined and directed
the course of chemical
evolution," he said in a report
at the annual meeting of the
American Association for the
Advancement of Science.
"A form of evolution purely
chemical in nature must of
necessity have preceded
biological evolution."
Ponnampermna, a former
space agency researcher, said
the beginning of life on earth
was a gradual process that
may have taken millions of
years. He said some form of
chemical evolution may now be
taking place on the great
planet Jupiter.
The first stage of the long
sequence leading to life began
probably about 13 billion years
ago, he said, when a catastrophic explosion of a primeval
cloud of hydrogen gas formed
the basic elements of all
matter.
He
said rudimentary
molecules, forerunners of
living things, may have been in
existence when earth formed
from a primitive cloud of
dust 4.5 billion years ago.
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Social Events

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The energy necessary to
form organic compounds from
earth's early atmosphere of
methane, ammonia, water
vapor and some hydrogen
apparently came primarily
from sunlight, Ponnamperuma
said. Laboratory tests under
such conditions have been able
to produce compounds considered Important for living
systems.
He also said life seems to be
an inevitable process and
bound to appear wherever the
right conditions exist. And
astronomers have calculated
that one out of every 20 stars in
the universe may have around
them conditions suitable for
life.

of Publication

REGULATIONS
The Publisher r ese rves the
right to e:dit or reject any ads
deemed ' objectional.
The
publ isher w i ll not be respon sible for more · than one i n
corre ct Insertion.

RATES

For Want Ad Service
5 cents per Word on e inserfton
M inimum Charge $1.00
14 cents 11er word th ree
con secu tiv e insertions .
26 cents per word six con secutive insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on paio
ads and ads paid within 10
days .
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$2 . 0(1 for 50 word ·min im um. Each addrtiona1 word

.

®
'Alii
t/1'-

•
pomeroy

2 SIGNS
OF

I

.,

Wheel Alignment

•s.ss

By Mrs. Frances Morris
The Booster Sunday School
Class mel Friday evening,
Feb. 15, with Mrs. Dorothy
Badgley, hostess at her home.
Mrs. Helen Simpson presented
devotions and program using
for a topic "Freedom Religious and Personal." After
group singing of "Faith of Our
Fathers" she read scripture
from Galatians and II Corinthians. Prayer and a reading
"Sacred Honors" followed.
Other readings included ''This
Land of Ours'.', ''The American
Creed",
"A ·· Nation's
Strength", 11 lnscription at
Mount
Vernon,"
''Washington," 11 Lincoln, "
"God of Our Fathers, 1' "The
World Has Need of You,"
"Ufe," "Story of the Hymn,
America the Beautiful" and
group singing of "America the
Beautiful." In the business
session, a contribution to the
Racine emergency squad was
made by the class. Contest
gannes were in charge of Mrs.
Cora Webb and prizes awarded. A Valentine theme was
carried out in refreshments
served to ten members by Mrs.
Badgley.
Mr. Henry Roush and Mrs.
Lenna Brinker have returned
from Holzer Medical Center
and are convalescing at their
homes.
A daughter was born to Mr.
and Mrs. John Nichols Feb. 11
In California. Maternal
grandparenlsare Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde Cross, Columbus. Great
grandmother is Mrs. Frankie
Neigler, Racine.
Mrs. Belle Theiss of Dorcas
spent an afternoon with Mrs.
Hazel Carnahan.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale McGraw
of Lake Wo:th, Florida, spent.
several days at their home
here.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Cleland,
Vincent and Ryan, were
weekend guests of his grandparents at Jacksonville.
Mrs . Evelyn Young and
Aaron · of Gallipolis were
weekend guests of her son, J .
F., and Mr. and Mrs. John
Young.
·
Miss Kim Taylor of
Gallipolis spent several days
with her grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Cleland, who ,
accompanied her home Sunday
evening .
Melvin Riffle of Columbus .
spent the weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Riffle.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Riffle
spent Wednedsay in Gallipolis
with Mr. and Mrs. Bill
McKenzie and family.
Crill Bradford Jr. of Worthington spent the holiday
weekend with ·Mr. and Mrs.
Critt Bradford Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. George Tassian'
and family of Cincinnati were
weekend guests of,· her mother,

Wolfpen
News, Notes
SWidayguestofMr. and Mrs.
Harley T. Johnson was Mrs.
Charley Smith. In the at~moon Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Thoma and Mrs. Larry Barr,
David and Michelle of Rutland
brought a cake and ice creann
to celebrate Mr . Harley
Johnson's birthday which was
Feb. 18. Miss Patricia Thoma
of Louisville called to wish her
grandfather happy birthday.
Mrs. J. R. Mnrphy was a
Monday visitor of Mr. and Mrs.
Harley T. Johnson in observance of Mr. Johnson's
birthday.
Ivan Shumate and son of
Mansfield were weekend
visitors of his mother, Mrs.
Shumate, who is recovering
from eye surgery. They also
visited Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Johnson and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Williann Boyce
of Colmnbus were weekend
visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Howard. Russell.
Kail, Charles and Kevin
Knapp were Saturday over·
night and Sunday visitors of
their grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Charley Smith.
Mrs. Steven Haggy and new
daughter returned home
Sunday from Holzer Medical
Cen~r. The new baby has been
named 'stepbenia Kay.
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Shumate
of Bantytown, W. Va., visited
Tuesday with Mrs. Geneva
Shumate at Holzer Medical
Center.

-GUARANTEEDPHONE 992 2094

1969 CHEVELLE

$154S
Ha rdtop Coupe, s t andard V -8 en_gine, automatic tra n s
mission, power stee r in g. factory a1r , bucket sea ts. a ~h ~ rp
c lea n ca r that anyone would love Da rk green f1m sh ,

Open 8 T1IS
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Mam , Pomeroy, 0 .

rnd io.

1970 BELAIR 4 DR . SEDAN
8 Cyl , sld , radi o. Blue fini sh

$1345

1969 CHEVROLET BISCAYNE

1845

Pomeroy

606 E. Main

OFFICE SUPPLIES

OFFtCE HOURS

and

FURNITURE

For Sale

Wanted To Buy

CORN, and hay Pllon e Evere tt EXCELS I OR Sal t Works, E
Holcomb. 99"2 2737
Matn St ., Pom eroy . A ll kind ~
I WISH to thank everyone who
2 27 Stp
of salt water p el lets, wat er
was so kind and thoughtful
nugg ets , b lo ck sa l t and own
dur ing mv stay in Veterans RECYCLE your newspap ers fo r
Oh iO R 1vcr Sa il. PhOn e 992
Memorial
Hospital.
I
$1.40 per 100 pound , your
3891.
especia lly w ish to thank Dr .
6 5 tfr..
brown
pasteboard
and
Lewis Tell e.
Dr .
John
cor rug ated paper for $1 4U per
Ridgway, all the staff at
tOO pound s We a r e "! I so your
Ve t erans Memoria l HospitaL
best mark et for wnit e IBM
those sending cards and
Cards for 6c per pound We
flowers , and the Auxil iary of
buy scrap i ron, cas t iron.
America Legion Post
140,
sheet tron , ti n , copper , brass.
New Haven , and anyone else
a ut o rad 1ator s. au t o bath" r i es
who helped in any way . Your
Our f le et of tr ucks will se r vtce
k i ndness will
never
be
any
tndu s try!
Conserve .
forgotten
( 2 Good Ones)
re c ycl e, and se ll your waste
Virginia Covert
ma te r i al s . We c lose each
ISide
by Side
$150
2 27 li p
Friday at noon tor balan ce of
each week. wnen you get tf all
1-2 Door
togetne r. se ll yours to Th e
(Top &amp; Bottom) $125
Rosenb erg Re c ycling Co .• 79
2 MALE hounds, Black and tan
Depo t Str eet, A t hens. Ohio
English Blue Ti cks . Lost for 2
.
222 1f c
POMEROY LANDMARK
weeks. Phone 992 -7698
2 26 5tp U SED Gravely tractor and
... _ Jack W. Carsey, Mgr .
atta chments . Phon e 949 3811 .
~ Phone 992 -9932
2 21 6tp

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display .

For Sale
23

IN C H Admtra l
Phone 992 5496

REFRIGERATORS

SHOOTING
Match,
Corn
Hollow Gun Club. tu rn first
right after Miles Cemetery ,
Ru tland . F actory choked
guns only . Sund ay , March 3, 1

pm

PHONE 992·1155
like

a good neighbor,
Steve Snowden

Is

there.
Slale Farm

-

,....

•uoo

A

M ul~o~lll

POLLY'S Auction House. 537
High St reet . M iddleport for
retail and consignments . 9 : 30
to 5. 30 da ll y Phone 992 · 3509
2 26 30tc
AUCTION Sale, Wednesday
nignt. 7p .m . at Addison. Rt. 7.
2-26 2tc
GUN Shoot, Mi le H il l Road
Sa turday , Marc h 2, 7 p m .
Sponsored by Racine F ir e
Department.

-cASH- PaiCrtoraiTIT;akeS

and
models of mobile homes . UP HO LS TERY fa brics by tn e
Phone area c ode 014-&lt;1 23 -9531.
yard 54 tn c h es wide , as low as
&lt;1 13 lf c
$1.95 p er yard . Ve lvets as l ow
as $3 45, Imported ve l vets ,
S9.95 ; we also hav e nylon,
OLD furnitur e. oak tables ,
nercu l on,
cotton
print s.
c loc k s, ice boxes . brass beds .
vtnyls. r em nants by th e yard
d iShes. desks , or co mplete
or by t h e p1e ce Pomeroy
househo ld s
Wr 1te M . D
Recovery , 622 E . Main Sf ,
M 1\l er , Rl. 4, Pomeroy , Ohio ,
Pome ro y Pnone 992 7554
call 992 -7760
1 29 -26tc
S lJ .tfc

----- -------

F OA M to fi 11 your old couch and
c t1a1r cu shion s as low as
!.10 .95 Uphols tery book s only
SOc. 4 in ch covered loam
mat tr esses for s tandar d size
be d ,
i29 . 95.
Pom e roy
Recovery , 622 E . Main St reet.
CASH oa1d for a ll makes and
Pom eroy . Phon e 992 755.1 .
model s of mobile names. J:lh _
1 29 2btc
area code 1014) 446 1425.
2-7-26tc
SMALL F ARM, gas we ll . Phon e
742626 1
2 '21 6tc
NO 1 copper . 70 c, radia tor s
32c, r ed brass . 3Sc, ba tt eries,
~ 1.20 M A Hall , Reedsville,
Ohio Phone 37 8 6249 .
1 27 tf c

For Rent

SMAL L business bu ilding 1•
mile north o f Pomeroy on St .
Rt . 33 . Can be leased and
conve r ted in to sma ll apart
?nent . A l so em pty lots 50', 100'
or 150' w ide . Ph . 992 -5786.
2 24 61c

1963 PON T I AC Bonnev i l le . For
part s or sat e as 1S Fo r m or e
mformation call 94 9 456 1.
2 25 9t c
HAY

Phon e 992 -7306

3 AND 4 ROOM furn ished and
unfurn1 s hed
apartments.
Phone 992 -5434.
4· 12 -tfc

Help Wanted

PRIVATE meeting room for
any organization , phone 992
3975
3 11-ttc

NEED LADY 1,\l h e l p with
spring housecleaning . Phone
992 -2677.
2-21 6tp
EXPERIENCED manto repair
vending
mach i nes .
ABC
Enterprizes, Mason , W Va .
773 5543 .
2 21 tfc
KOSCOT KOSMt: 1 I LS &amp; WIG S.
We have the product on hand
and we deliver to you per
sona lly . He l en Jane Brown,

992.5113.

12 -JO.tfc

Employment

W·~!ad

t:XPERIENCED painter , in
terlor and exteri or . Call Don
Van Meter . Phone 985 -395 1

2·3·29tp

Wanted To Buy
LET us sell it for you at auc
lion Will buy all furn iture or
househol d goods . Polly's
Auction 'House, Open lil : 30 to
5:J Odaily Phone 992 -3509. 537
H igh St ., Middl eport , Ohio
2-26 -JOtc
196.4 AND OLDER silver . Will
pay S2 .50 tor $1 worth or t rade
any type coins for your silver
Ca ll or w r ite Jack ie A . wam s
ley, Rt . 1 Middleport Phone
742 3651.
2-25 -6tc
ANTIQUE quilts and iewelry .
Also, Interested in furnitur e
and d is fles . Cal! 992 5262
evenings or mornings.
2-20 ti c

PUBLIC NOTICE
AUCTION Sale every Tnursday
at 537 High Street. M id ·
dleport
Starting March 7,
Polly 's Auction House. Phone
992 3509 .
2·26 -ltc

-------- ------

SANCfiONS LEVIF.D
COLUMBUS ;(UP!) - · Jlle
0hio Educatibn Association
Monday levied professional
sanctions against the Southwest Local School District in
Hamilton
County
after
negotiations between the
district school board and
teachers !rake down. Teachers
began a work stoppage in the
Americans eat about one dispute Friday over teacher
million pounds of shrimp a•
day. or. about one·lhird the dismissals and continued it
Monday.
total .world production .

For sale

2 B LACK riding mar es and 1
sorrel gelding, gent le A sk a t
Rut l and Furn i tur e. Phon e
742 -4211, after 5 ca ll 742 5501
2-24-Mc
YOUNGSTOWN kitch en smk
w it h fau ce ts . Good conditton
$50 See a t 256 So F our tn
Ave., Midd l eport.
2 18 -tfc

1 YEAR OL D w h i le fa ce bull COA L F OR SALE. JAYMAR
COAL
COM P A NY .
THE
Ca l l 949 -321 1, $350 .
ME I GS &amp; GALUA LINE ,
2 -27 -3t c
RO UTE
7
AT
STATE
CHESHIRE , OPEN 8 A .M
12 HORSEPOWER cub cadet.
TILL 6 : 30 PM . 5 DAY S A
48 inch mower , 8 months old .
WEEK . PHONE 992 -5693
Hydro stati c Pllone 742 ·3821 .
2 25 5t c
2-27 -tt c
17 C HURCH pews, one pulpit
stand Ca ll 742 581 5 or 985 ·
3824 .
2 27 4tc

Mobile Homes For sale

1974
GREENBR I ER,
2
bedroom,
65x
12,
electr1c
heat
GOOD hay for sa t e , any
witfl air condit ioner m cl ud cd .
amount . One used swive l
Call992 -3747 or 992 -7338 after 6
rocker i n fair co ndition .
p m.
Phone 985 3576 .
"J -27 -Stc
2-27 -3tp
PRE SP R lNG SA LE at Berry
Miller Mobile Homes, 705
F arson Street , Belp re , Ohio,
phone 423 9531 : Buy now take delivery in sp ring ~ tak e
advantage of wtnter lime
SAL T FOR I CE AND S NO ~ ••
prices on some outstanding
Rock salt for town ships.
used Mobiles Homes
to wns , and businesses i n 1971 - 2 bedroom ~ 60 x 12
bulks and bags for ice and
Princess, was S6,49 5.00, sa l e
snow Exce lsior Sal t Works .
pr ice s5,295 .00 Ohis mob i l e
Phone 992 -3891.
hom e new cos t SB.OCIO OOJ
11 · 11 tfc 1971 - 65x 12 Champ ton. supe r
sa l e pri ce on l y S-4,995.00
AM FM stereo -radio 8 -track 1971 - 60x12 Buddy "class i c,"
was 55,49 5. 00 now only
tape player , 4 speake r sound
$4,795.00
system. Ba lance $109 .3 2: or 1971 two 60x12 Champion .
t erm s . Ca l l 992 3965 .
were $4,495.00 , now only
2-19 -Hc
$3,995 00
TWI N
N EEDLE
S EW I NG 197 1 - 60)(12 E lcona "C ustom ,"
new pr i ce $7,295 oo; sa le price
MACHINE S 1974 mode l 1n
$5.795 .00
walnut stand . All featur es
1974 - tnr ee Detrotters - up to
built -in to make f ancy des igns
$1, 00 0.00 off .
and do str etch sewing. A lso
buttonholes, blind he m s, etc.
WE HAVE many other sizes
S43 .35 c ash or terms ava ilab e.
and varieties of Mobile
Phone 992 -2653
Homes on sa l e. Our pr ice s
2-19.tfc
In clude your de lt very an d
com pl ete set -up, don 't wa1t.
VACUUM CLEAN ERS Electro
shop now, you ' ll be g lad you
Hygiene New Demonstrators
did .
ha s a l l cle an ing attachments
2-15 -12t c
plus tt'l e new E l ec t ro Suds for
s hampoo ing carpet . Only
$27 50
cash
or
terms
availab l e. Phone 992 -2653.
1969 P L YMOUTH Road runn er
in good shape , S650. See Butch
Armes, or ca ll 992 -3181
2 27 · 10tc

2·191fc

~;~~;;DA -;L~25~ .. ~n~bb; es .'2 set s of gears and expans1on
chamber . Sel ling at a lo ss .
Phone 99 2 5323 .

INFORMATION ABOUT:

JOB OPPORTUNITIES
SOCIAL SECURITY
CONSUMER PROTECTION

AND
GREAT COUNTRY

PAC I F IC ISS Reloader and
wor k bench, set up for 12
gaug e AA shel ls . Includes
It haca Model 37 12 gauge
pump with case and c l eaning
kit . Phone 992 5323
2 26 ·3tp
P ICKU P
tru ck
topper .
panell ed . l ights , factory built.
1 year old Phone 992 -7132 .
2 26 4tc

STEREO
Walnut
AM FM
Rad io, 8 tra c k tape com
bination . Ba l ance $1 10. 73 , or
terms avai lab le Phon e 992
3965 .
2 1-1 lfc

Pels For Sale
AKC To y Poodl e puppt es . $75
Si ame se kittens. $15 Phon e 1
256 63 47
2 21 26 t c

Ma son , W .Va.

EXPERIENCED

ONE 1972 K1ngwood Esta t e
Stat ion Wagon . 9 pa sse nger , 1
lo cal owner. Phone Wayn e
Milhoan , 992 5602 .
2 24 61p

Real Estate For Sale
DESIRABLE two bedroom
hou se in Middlepor t. ready to
occupy Call 992 53 10.
1-31 26tc
SI X RO OM house with bath ,
c ity wat er, co a l furnac e. 3
ac r es. near the Pomeroy Go lf
Cours e Phon e 992 3944.
2 25 -3tc
NEW J bedroom nom e, P '1 bath ,
ga rag e, basement on Grave l
H i ll , M i ddleport . Natural gas
already in . P hon e Da t e
Dutton. 99"2 -3369, eveni ng s
992 2534 .
1 17 -tfc
2 yEAR OLD "J4)(24 cei ling ,
hom e . Elec tr1c heat . For
more in tormat 1on, ca\ 1 773
5503 .
OL DER home, under $5,000, ha s
gre at future
Major im
Pr ovem e n t s ins1dc , n ee d s
pa int ins1de and out . L aid out
like a new home
Full
ba sement and ga r age Phone
992 5335.
2 24 61C

NEW J bedroom hom e, good
water , 6 acres , 3 outbu l ldmo s
and ce llar . Off Me igs Co unty
I, on William Sm1th Road 3 11,
mi les from Sa l em Center .
1 27 26tp

Pomeroy

9~'2 - 2174

BLO CK S bored and a ll repatrs
on sma ll engtnes , W tl kinson
Sm n ll Eng tne Sal es , 399 W
Matn St , PhOne 992 3092.
7 6 76 \c
OPE N , Roger Hyse ll 's Garage,
near Crossroads on St . Ro ute
1211 . a· 30 to 6 p m Monday
tt1ro ugh Sa tu rday Pnone 992 ·
5682 or 99 2 7121
"J 22 26 tc
W I L L tnm or cu t trees
shrubbery . A lso . clean
ba semen ts. atl ics , et c.
Qd9 322 1 or 742 4441
22

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992 -7089
Night 992-3525
or 992·5232

Ph . 992· 5271
lincoln Hill- Pomeroy ,

0.

Painting A Specialty
Area's Mosl
R easonable Prices

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

and
ou t
Cal l
26tc

NEW HOM ES . ROOFS , AND
REMODELI NG
F-or fr ee
estimates , ca ll 992 6064 or 992
6680 .

Real Estate For Sale
bi -Leve l and spl it
level hom es ar e now under
co nstruction on ci t y wa t er
a nd sewer . M a ny de lu)(e
fea t ures includmg a ir con
ditioning . Best f i nan c ing
ava i lab le. Oth er type homes
in differ en t a r eas on F .H
A dm . fina n c ing with no down
paymen t . Call co l lect (8 37
6540) or write to MEIG S
DEVELOPMENT , P 0 . Bo x
33, M iddleport , Ohio, -15 760
1-9 tfc

~ PAC I OUS

TEAFORD
Vtrqil B . Tt· af o rd . Sr.

All work guaranteed
'
C BRA DF ORD, Auctio neer
Com pl ete Service
Phon e 949 -3821
Raci ne , Ohio
Cri tt Bradford
s . l -Ife
EXCAVA TING . dozer, loader
and backhoe work , septic
ta nk s insta ll ed ; dump trucks
and lo boys fo r hire . will haul
fi l l d ir t, top sol i, limestone
and gravel. Call Bob or Roger
Jeffe r s , day phone 992 -7089 ;
n1ght phone 992 3525 0!;. 992
5232
,.. 2 11 -tfc
DOZER wo r k , land ctEfaring by
the a cr e hour l y or contract ,
farm ponds , roads, etc. Large
dozer and operator w ith over
20 years experience Pullins
Excavati ng, Pomeroy, Ohio .
Phone 992 -2478.
A"U11JIVfOBILE Insurance been·
Los!
your
c ance ll ed?
opera tor's li ce nse . Ca ll 992
7428
6 15 -tfc
SEWING M AC HINE S. Repa ir
se rv ic e, all makes, 992 -2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy
Au thor i zed Sing er Sales and
Servi ce. We Sh a rp en Scisso r s
3 -29 -tfc
PRICE
CO NSTRUCTION .
Rooting, spouting , kitchens ·
and bathrooms Comp let e
remode lt ng . Pnone 742 .6273 .
,
12-3-ffc
DOZER and ba c k hoe work,
pond s and sep ti c tanks , dlt ·
c h lng ser vice. toP SOtl, fill
dirt, limestone; B&amp;K E x cavati ng . Phone 992 5367 or
992 -3861
9 1 tf c

Brnk•'r
11 0 Ml'ch,Ht •c Slrt'l'l
Pomeroy, OhiO ·l'l769

BRAND NEW-

3

bedrooms,

11h baths, e lectric heat . Storm
doors a nd windows . Garage
and near ly an a c r e $22,000.
2 APARTMENTS.- One up with
1 br . and 2 bedrooms down
Ful l base ment. Gas furna ces

READY -MIX
CO N CRE TE
de livered right to
your
project . Fast and easy Free
estimates . Phone 992 -328 4.
Goeg l e ln Ready -Mix Co ,
Middleport. OhJo.
6-30-tf c

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED

$20,000 .00

REASONABLE rates, Ph . 446 ·
4782, Gallipol is, John Russell
Owner and Operator .
5 -12 -tfc

COUNTRY HOME - Modern&lt;

SEPTIC

br s. , a ll paneled hom e, large
bath, l arge kitch en . d in ing .
Only a few yr s old .-$ 18,000 00.

NEAR GAVIN - 3 bed room s.
bath, ga s furna ce, nice out .
building with ce lla r, ·and lot
R~a so n able offer
RENTAlS One w ilh 6
bedrooms, a 3 bedroom trailer
and a 1 bed room trailer .

ALL OF THE SE ARE GOOD
BUYS. COME IN AND HAVE
A LOOT.
608 E.

MAIN
POMEROY,
SYRACUSE - Large 2 story

TANKS.

AROBIC

SEWAGE
SYSTE MS
CL EANED ,
REPAIRED .
M IL LER
S ANITAT IO N,
STEWA RT, OHIO . PH . 662·
3035 .

IO·Hfc

SE PTIC
TANK S cleaned .
Modern San ltatlon , 992 -3954 or
992 -7349 .
10· 23 -tfc
BACkHO E Ser¥ice, CHARLES-·
R HATFIELD ,
Route 1,
Rutland. Ohio, 45775. phone
7.42 -6092 W11ter lines , footers,
and trenches 24 hours , 7
day s a week .
2-7 26tp
"NEIGLER S FOR BUILDING
HOUSES . We'll draw pr ints
or
build
to
your
specifications
Ne igler's
Bu i ld i ng Supply, Racine,
Ohio . Ca ll 949 3604 .
2 s 26fc

o-

frame. 7 rooms . 2 bath s. 4
BR .
Riv e r
f ront age .
Ba se m en t . N ew FA ga s
furn ace,
new
co pper
p l umbing .
Garage

$10.500.00.

SYRACUSE- Love ly 2 yr .

o1 d home. Al l new homes in
thi s area. 3 nice BR. double
clo sets . Co l ored bath W·
sho wer . Bea utiful kitchen
w1th cabinets &amp; range.
Utility R . HW floors . Some
carpeting . Drapes. Carport
w .storage . $19,900 .00

B io Capacity
Maytag
Automatics
2 speed operation .
Choice of water
temps. Auto. water
level contro l. Lint
F ilter or Power Fin
Agitator.
Perm a-Press
Mayta9
Halo of Heat
Dryers
Surround
clothes
wlth gentle , e¥en
heat . No hot spots ,
no overdrying. Fine
Mesh Lint Filter
We Specialize in

TUPPERS PLAINS - 1971

Mob ile Home bought new in
'72. 12 x60, 1/ :;o acr e ground .
Carpe ted , 2 BR . Ba th Like

new. JUS T $6.50000.
77 ROUGH ACRE 5- Close
to Forked Run Lak e. C1ty
water avai la bl e. Idea l for
hom e
or
tr ailer .
A1 1
m in er a l s
Full
price

MAYTAG

Red Carpet
Service

$9.000.00

RAISE TH E CURTA IN ON
ANEW TYPE OF LIFE BY
OWN IN G PROPERTY. TO
BUY OR SELL SEE US.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
992·2259

RUTLAND FURNITURE
742·4211

Arnold Grate

Rutland

If no answer 992 -2568

MONTGOMERY WARD &amp; C0:-1
(Serving America for 100 Years)
Offers an exciting opportunity to operate a business of
your own with a very small investment. We are interested in a qualified Sales oriented person with
previous retail experience to own and operate a catalog
store in Pomeroy, Ohio.
If you are willing to accept responsibility in return for a
future in your own business, write giving full personal
qualifications to :

E. A. Smith, 4-1
1000 S. Monroe Street
Baltimore, Maryland 21232

$TEREO
92.1 FM
WMPO
M

From t he larges t Truck or
Bu l ldozer Radiator to the
sma l lest Heater Core
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

Ph.

Water Lines and Power
Lines . All work done by the
foot or contract . Also doter
work and septic tanks in stalled .

Gene's
Body Shop

Auto sales

2 17 26 t C

Rlv'ERSIDE Inn , now open
und e r new man agement of TWO small rooms , fur ni shed . SINGE R sew1 n g ma chin es 1972
Sp r ing Avenue, coupl es on l y .
mode l in beauti f ul walnut
Fred (Sirml Mtllet Everyone
Call Sunday or evenings, 992
ca binet Makes d esign sti t
come and br ing your friends 1
3.129
ches, zig zag, buttonholes,
2 24 6tp
2 24 -Mp
blmd hems, el c L 1ke n ew
On ly $89 95 . Call Ravenswood
WILL buy furn itur e and mer ·
273 952t or 273 9893 after 5. 00
TRA IL ER. Brown's Trailer
chandise at Polly' s AuctiOn
127 -tf c
House. Addison . Phone 992 Park. , Phon e 992 -3324 .
2 26 tf c
3509.
2-20 -7tc
GROCERY busme ss lor sa l e
UNFURNI SHED a partm ent. 2
Bui ld ing for sa l e or lease .
Ar ... NOUN C IN G new hours tor
b edroom s, elec tri c h eat.
Phone 773 -5618 from 8 30 p.m
income tax serv 1ce . Open only
Hartford , W . Va . Phone 773 to 10 p .m . for appointment .
on Monday , Wednesday and
5975 .
3 20-tfc
Friday
9
a.m .
to
5
2-21 -tfc
p m . Evening s by app t
F OR SA LE . Large leve l lot o n
Wanda Eblin , Co Rd 22, off 2 BEDROOM mobile nom e, a ll
N ew Lima Road, Ru tland . A ll
Route 7 byplJSS Pnone 992
uti l it ies paid No pets . Robert
ultlit1es available Phone 742 2212.
H il l. Racine, Phon e 9A9 38 11.
3083
2 21 12tp
2 8 30tc
2 1.tf c
HARRI SO N'S TV and Serv1ce
ca l ls Phone 992 -2522.
2 n 26tc

TV

2 24 tf c

Mi~port-Pomerov -

'

•

co lor

GOOD USED

Notice

MATERIALS CO.
773 -5554

992 ·2094

8.30 am . to 5:00pm. Da ily .
8 · 30 a .m. to 12 : 00 N oon

Card of Thanks

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

POMEROY
'HOME &amp; AUTO

•I Door. au to .. P.S .• P .B.

per

Sa~urday .

Built to Your ' Spec s.
De livered to Job Site

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

3c .

BLIND ADS
Addit ional 25t Charge
Advertisement .

.

On Most Am e ncan Cars

lost

Mrs. Lillian Lee and other
relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Thereon
Johnson spent several days
visiting'relalives in Akron, Mr .
and Mrs. Kenneth Konicek and
fannily in Cleveland and Mr.
and Mrs. Scott Wheeler and
family In Lucasville.
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Simpson
and children of Baltimore
spent over the holiday weekend
with their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Chester Simpson and Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Badgley.
The Esther Missionary
Circle of First Baptist Church
mel at the home of Mrs. Ralph
Badley Monday evening, Feb.
ld, at 6:30 p. m. for beans and
cornbread supper. The regular
meeting followed. Mrs. Gretta
Simpson, president, opened by
reading scripture. The group
sang "In the Service of the
King". Scripture was from
Acts. 9. Vera Beegle read a
poem, "Love Thyself Last"
and Mrs. Bikacson read
"Hands That Minister." "More
Uke the Master" preceded the
business session. A program
was presented by Mrs. Isabel
Simpson including readings
"Wagging Their Tales Behind
Them,"
.. Growth
of
Christianity" in three . parts
"To Me to Uve Is Christ",
"Key 73", "Mass Meetings",
11
Jewish Criticism," ulsrael",
"Nagaland. Baptist Centennial", "Baptisms, •r "A
Ugh! to Encourage Others",
11
5 for Bacone" in three parts.
Program closed with prayer· by
Mrs. Edna Pickens. After
discussion on finishing the lap
robes, the meeting closed with
singing "My Prayer."

=~~~~~·-=======~===========;~==========~
EXPERT
ASK us ABOUT
DITCHING SERVICE
PRE-FABRICATED

Motor Co•

QU A.ILIJY

Bttsiness Services

..
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7- The Daily Sentin&lt;H, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. 27, 1974

.,

Life's puz~le
almost solved

•
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Classifieds Get Result!$!
WA~T ADS
INFORMATION

M

5 p

o~:;~f~~~~~blicatio"

cZ:.~~?~~\;~~adllnC;r~e~lions
be accepted until 9 a.m. for

will

Day

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SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - An authority orl
chemical evolution predicted tod&lt;:y that scientists
eventually will piece together the puzzle of life's
origin, starting from the basic chemical conditions
from which ?II life evolved.
Dr. Cyril Ponnamperuma, professo~ of
chemistry at the University of Maryland, satd so
much has been learned in biochemistry during the
past decade.or two that chemists have every right to
be optimistic they will Jearn all the secrets of the
start of life.

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Th ere is no reason to doubt
that we shall rediscover, one
by one, the physical and
chemical conditions which
once determined and directed
the course of chemical
evolution," he said in a report
at the annual meeting of the
American Association for the
Advancement of Science.
"A form of evolution purely
chemical in nature must of
necessity have preceded
biological evolution."
Ponnampermna, a former
space agency researcher, said
the beginning of life on earth
was a gradual process that
may have taken millions of
years. He said some form of
chemical evolution may now be
taking place on the great
planet Jupiter.
The first stage of the long
sequence leading to life began
probably about 13 billion years
ago, he said, when a catastrophic explosion of a primeval
cloud of hydrogen gas formed
the basic elements of all
matter.
He
said rudimentary
molecules, forerunners of
living things, may have been in
existence when earth formed
from a primitive cloud of
dust 4.5 billion years ago.
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Social Events

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The energy necessary to
form organic compounds from
earth's early atmosphere of
methane, ammonia, water
vapor and some hydrogen
apparently came primarily
from sunlight, Ponnamperuma
said. Laboratory tests under
such conditions have been able
to produce compounds considered Important for living
systems.
He also said life seems to be
an inevitable process and
bound to appear wherever the
right conditions exist. And
astronomers have calculated
that one out of every 20 stars in
the universe may have around
them conditions suitable for
life.

of Publication

REGULATIONS
The Publisher r ese rves the
right to e:dit or reject any ads
deemed ' objectional.
The
publ isher w i ll not be respon sible for more · than one i n
corre ct Insertion.

RATES

For Want Ad Service
5 cents per Word on e inserfton
M inimum Charge $1.00
14 cents 11er word th ree
con secu tiv e insertions .
26 cents per word six con secutive insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on paio
ads and ads paid within 10
days .
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$2 . 0(1 for 50 word ·min im um. Each addrtiona1 word

.

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'Alii
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•
pomeroy

2 SIGNS
OF

I

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Wheel Alignment

•s.ss

By Mrs. Frances Morris
The Booster Sunday School
Class mel Friday evening,
Feb. 15, with Mrs. Dorothy
Badgley, hostess at her home.
Mrs. Helen Simpson presented
devotions and program using
for a topic "Freedom Religious and Personal." After
group singing of "Faith of Our
Fathers" she read scripture
from Galatians and II Corinthians. Prayer and a reading
"Sacred Honors" followed.
Other readings included ''This
Land of Ours'.', ''The American
Creed",
"A ·· Nation's
Strength", 11 lnscription at
Mount
Vernon,"
''Washington," 11 Lincoln, "
"God of Our Fathers, 1' "The
World Has Need of You,"
"Ufe," "Story of the Hymn,
America the Beautiful" and
group singing of "America the
Beautiful." In the business
session, a contribution to the
Racine emergency squad was
made by the class. Contest
gannes were in charge of Mrs.
Cora Webb and prizes awarded. A Valentine theme was
carried out in refreshments
served to ten members by Mrs.
Badgley.
Mr. Henry Roush and Mrs.
Lenna Brinker have returned
from Holzer Medical Center
and are convalescing at their
homes.
A daughter was born to Mr.
and Mrs. John Nichols Feb. 11
In California. Maternal
grandparenlsare Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde Cross, Columbus. Great
grandmother is Mrs. Frankie
Neigler, Racine.
Mrs. Belle Theiss of Dorcas
spent an afternoon with Mrs.
Hazel Carnahan.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale McGraw
of Lake Wo:th, Florida, spent.
several days at their home
here.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Cleland,
Vincent and Ryan, were
weekend guests of his grandparents at Jacksonville.
Mrs . Evelyn Young and
Aaron · of Gallipolis were
weekend guests of her son, J .
F., and Mr. and Mrs. John
Young.
·
Miss Kim Taylor of
Gallipolis spent several days
with her grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Cleland, who ,
accompanied her home Sunday
evening .
Melvin Riffle of Columbus .
spent the weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Riffle.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Riffle
spent Wednedsay in Gallipolis
with Mr. and Mrs. Bill
McKenzie and family.
Crill Bradford Jr. of Worthington spent the holiday
weekend with ·Mr. and Mrs.
Critt Bradford Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. George Tassian'
and family of Cincinnati were
weekend guests of,· her mother,

Wolfpen
News, Notes
SWidayguestofMr. and Mrs.
Harley T. Johnson was Mrs.
Charley Smith. In the at~moon Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Thoma and Mrs. Larry Barr,
David and Michelle of Rutland
brought a cake and ice creann
to celebrate Mr . Harley
Johnson's birthday which was
Feb. 18. Miss Patricia Thoma
of Louisville called to wish her
grandfather happy birthday.
Mrs. J. R. Mnrphy was a
Monday visitor of Mr. and Mrs.
Harley T. Johnson in observance of Mr. Johnson's
birthday.
Ivan Shumate and son of
Mansfield were weekend
visitors of his mother, Mrs.
Shumate, who is recovering
from eye surgery. They also
visited Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Johnson and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Williann Boyce
of Colmnbus were weekend
visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Howard. Russell.
Kail, Charles and Kevin
Knapp were Saturday over·
night and Sunday visitors of
their grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Charley Smith.
Mrs. Steven Haggy and new
daughter returned home
Sunday from Holzer Medical
Cen~r. The new baby has been
named 'stepbenia Kay.
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Shumate
of Bantytown, W. Va., visited
Tuesday with Mrs. Geneva
Shumate at Holzer Medical
Center.

-GUARANTEEDPHONE 992 2094

1969 CHEVELLE

$154S
Ha rdtop Coupe, s t andard V -8 en_gine, automatic tra n s
mission, power stee r in g. factory a1r , bucket sea ts. a ~h ~ rp
c lea n ca r that anyone would love Da rk green f1m sh ,

Open 8 T1IS
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Mam , Pomeroy, 0 .

rnd io.

1970 BELAIR 4 DR . SEDAN
8 Cyl , sld , radi o. Blue fini sh

$1345

1969 CHEVROLET BISCAYNE

1845

Pomeroy

606 E. Main

OFFICE SUPPLIES

OFFtCE HOURS

and

FURNITURE

For Sale

Wanted To Buy

CORN, and hay Pllon e Evere tt EXCELS I OR Sal t Works, E
Holcomb. 99"2 2737
Matn St ., Pom eroy . A ll kind ~
I WISH to thank everyone who
2 27 Stp
of salt water p el lets, wat er
was so kind and thoughtful
nugg ets , b lo ck sa l t and own
dur ing mv stay in Veterans RECYCLE your newspap ers fo r
Oh iO R 1vcr Sa il. PhOn e 992
Memorial
Hospital.
I
$1.40 per 100 pound , your
3891.
especia lly w ish to thank Dr .
6 5 tfr..
brown
pasteboard
and
Lewis Tell e.
Dr .
John
cor rug ated paper for $1 4U per
Ridgway, all the staff at
tOO pound s We a r e "! I so your
Ve t erans Memoria l HospitaL
best mark et for wnit e IBM
those sending cards and
Cards for 6c per pound We
flowers , and the Auxil iary of
buy scrap i ron, cas t iron.
America Legion Post
140,
sheet tron , ti n , copper , brass.
New Haven , and anyone else
a ut o rad 1ator s. au t o bath" r i es
who helped in any way . Your
Our f le et of tr ucks will se r vtce
k i ndness will
never
be
any
tndu s try!
Conserve .
forgotten
( 2 Good Ones)
re c ycl e, and se ll your waste
Virginia Covert
ma te r i al s . We c lose each
ISide
by Side
$150
2 27 li p
Friday at noon tor balan ce of
each week. wnen you get tf all
1-2 Door
togetne r. se ll yours to Th e
(Top &amp; Bottom) $125
Rosenb erg Re c ycling Co .• 79
2 MALE hounds, Black and tan
Depo t Str eet, A t hens. Ohio
English Blue Ti cks . Lost for 2
.
222 1f c
POMEROY LANDMARK
weeks. Phone 992 -7698
2 26 5tp U SED Gravely tractor and
... _ Jack W. Carsey, Mgr .
atta chments . Phon e 949 3811 .
~ Phone 992 -9932
2 21 6tp

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display .

For Sale
23

IN C H Admtra l
Phone 992 5496

REFRIGERATORS

SHOOTING
Match,
Corn
Hollow Gun Club. tu rn first
right after Miles Cemetery ,
Ru tland . F actory choked
guns only . Sund ay , March 3, 1

pm

PHONE 992·1155
like

a good neighbor,
Steve Snowden

Is

there.
Slale Farm

-

,....

•uoo

A

M ul~o~lll

POLLY'S Auction House. 537
High St reet . M iddleport for
retail and consignments . 9 : 30
to 5. 30 da ll y Phone 992 · 3509
2 26 30tc
AUCTION Sale, Wednesday
nignt. 7p .m . at Addison. Rt. 7.
2-26 2tc
GUN Shoot, Mi le H il l Road
Sa turday , Marc h 2, 7 p m .
Sponsored by Racine F ir e
Department.

-cASH- PaiCrtoraiTIT;akeS

and
models of mobile homes . UP HO LS TERY fa brics by tn e
Phone area c ode 014-&lt;1 23 -9531.
yard 54 tn c h es wide , as low as
&lt;1 13 lf c
$1.95 p er yard . Ve lvets as l ow
as $3 45, Imported ve l vets ,
S9.95 ; we also hav e nylon,
OLD furnitur e. oak tables ,
nercu l on,
cotton
print s.
c loc k s, ice boxes . brass beds .
vtnyls. r em nants by th e yard
d iShes. desks , or co mplete
or by t h e p1e ce Pomeroy
househo ld s
Wr 1te M . D
Recovery , 622 E . Main Sf ,
M 1\l er , Rl. 4, Pomeroy , Ohio ,
Pome ro y Pnone 992 7554
call 992 -7760
1 29 -26tc
S lJ .tfc

----- -------

F OA M to fi 11 your old couch and
c t1a1r cu shion s as low as
!.10 .95 Uphols tery book s only
SOc. 4 in ch covered loam
mat tr esses for s tandar d size
be d ,
i29 . 95.
Pom e roy
Recovery , 622 E . Main St reet.
CASH oa1d for a ll makes and
Pom eroy . Phon e 992 755.1 .
model s of mobile names. J:lh _
1 29 2btc
area code 1014) 446 1425.
2-7-26tc
SMALL F ARM, gas we ll . Phon e
742626 1
2 '21 6tc
NO 1 copper . 70 c, radia tor s
32c, r ed brass . 3Sc, ba tt eries,
~ 1.20 M A Hall , Reedsville,
Ohio Phone 37 8 6249 .
1 27 tf c

For Rent

SMAL L business bu ilding 1•
mile north o f Pomeroy on St .
Rt . 33 . Can be leased and
conve r ted in to sma ll apart
?nent . A l so em pty lots 50', 100'
or 150' w ide . Ph . 992 -5786.
2 24 61c

1963 PON T I AC Bonnev i l le . For
part s or sat e as 1S Fo r m or e
mformation call 94 9 456 1.
2 25 9t c
HAY

Phon e 992 -7306

3 AND 4 ROOM furn ished and
unfurn1 s hed
apartments.
Phone 992 -5434.
4· 12 -tfc

Help Wanted

PRIVATE meeting room for
any organization , phone 992
3975
3 11-ttc

NEED LADY 1,\l h e l p with
spring housecleaning . Phone
992 -2677.
2-21 6tp
EXPERIENCED manto repair
vending
mach i nes .
ABC
Enterprizes, Mason , W Va .
773 5543 .
2 21 tfc
KOSCOT KOSMt: 1 I LS &amp; WIG S.
We have the product on hand
and we deliver to you per
sona lly . He l en Jane Brown,

992.5113.

12 -JO.tfc

Employment

W·~!ad

t:XPERIENCED painter , in
terlor and exteri or . Call Don
Van Meter . Phone 985 -395 1

2·3·29tp

Wanted To Buy
LET us sell it for you at auc
lion Will buy all furn iture or
househol d goods . Polly's
Auction 'House, Open lil : 30 to
5:J Odaily Phone 992 -3509. 537
H igh St ., Middl eport , Ohio
2-26 -JOtc
196.4 AND OLDER silver . Will
pay S2 .50 tor $1 worth or t rade
any type coins for your silver
Ca ll or w r ite Jack ie A . wam s
ley, Rt . 1 Middleport Phone
742 3651.
2-25 -6tc
ANTIQUE quilts and iewelry .
Also, Interested in furnitur e
and d is fles . Cal! 992 5262
evenings or mornings.
2-20 ti c

PUBLIC NOTICE
AUCTION Sale every Tnursday
at 537 High Street. M id ·
dleport
Starting March 7,
Polly 's Auction House. Phone
992 3509 .
2·26 -ltc

-------- ------

SANCfiONS LEVIF.D
COLUMBUS ;(UP!) - · Jlle
0hio Educatibn Association
Monday levied professional
sanctions against the Southwest Local School District in
Hamilton
County
after
negotiations between the
district school board and
teachers !rake down. Teachers
began a work stoppage in the
Americans eat about one dispute Friday over teacher
million pounds of shrimp a•
day. or. about one·lhird the dismissals and continued it
Monday.
total .world production .

For sale

2 B LACK riding mar es and 1
sorrel gelding, gent le A sk a t
Rut l and Furn i tur e. Phon e
742 -4211, after 5 ca ll 742 5501
2-24-Mc
YOUNGSTOWN kitch en smk
w it h fau ce ts . Good conditton
$50 See a t 256 So F our tn
Ave., Midd l eport.
2 18 -tfc

1 YEAR OL D w h i le fa ce bull COA L F OR SALE. JAYMAR
COAL
COM P A NY .
THE
Ca l l 949 -321 1, $350 .
ME I GS &amp; GALUA LINE ,
2 -27 -3t c
RO UTE
7
AT
STATE
CHESHIRE , OPEN 8 A .M
12 HORSEPOWER cub cadet.
TILL 6 : 30 PM . 5 DAY S A
48 inch mower , 8 months old .
WEEK . PHONE 992 -5693
Hydro stati c Pllone 742 ·3821 .
2 25 5t c
2-27 -tt c
17 C HURCH pews, one pulpit
stand Ca ll 742 581 5 or 985 ·
3824 .
2 27 4tc

Mobile Homes For sale

1974
GREENBR I ER,
2
bedroom,
65x
12,
electr1c
heat
GOOD hay for sa t e , any
witfl air condit ioner m cl ud cd .
amount . One used swive l
Call992 -3747 or 992 -7338 after 6
rocker i n fair co ndition .
p m.
Phone 985 3576 .
"J -27 -Stc
2-27 -3tp
PRE SP R lNG SA LE at Berry
Miller Mobile Homes, 705
F arson Street , Belp re , Ohio,
phone 423 9531 : Buy now take delivery in sp ring ~ tak e
advantage of wtnter lime
SAL T FOR I CE AND S NO ~ ••
prices on some outstanding
Rock salt for town ships.
used Mobiles Homes
to wns , and businesses i n 1971 - 2 bedroom ~ 60 x 12
bulks and bags for ice and
Princess, was S6,49 5.00, sa l e
snow Exce lsior Sal t Works .
pr ice s5,295 .00 Ohis mob i l e
Phone 992 -3891.
hom e new cos t SB.OCIO OOJ
11 · 11 tfc 1971 - 65x 12 Champ ton. supe r
sa l e pri ce on l y S-4,995.00
AM FM stereo -radio 8 -track 1971 - 60x12 Buddy "class i c,"
was 55,49 5. 00 now only
tape player , 4 speake r sound
$4,795.00
system. Ba lance $109 .3 2: or 1971 two 60x12 Champion .
t erm s . Ca l l 992 3965 .
were $4,495.00 , now only
2-19 -Hc
$3,995 00
TWI N
N EEDLE
S EW I NG 197 1 - 60)(12 E lcona "C ustom ,"
new pr i ce $7,295 oo; sa le price
MACHINE S 1974 mode l 1n
$5.795 .00
walnut stand . All featur es
1974 - tnr ee Detrotters - up to
built -in to make f ancy des igns
$1, 00 0.00 off .
and do str etch sewing. A lso
buttonholes, blind he m s, etc.
WE HAVE many other sizes
S43 .35 c ash or terms ava ilab e.
and varieties of Mobile
Phone 992 -2653
Homes on sa l e. Our pr ice s
2-19.tfc
In clude your de lt very an d
com pl ete set -up, don 't wa1t.
VACUUM CLEAN ERS Electro
shop now, you ' ll be g lad you
Hygiene New Demonstrators
did .
ha s a l l cle an ing attachments
2-15 -12t c
plus tt'l e new E l ec t ro Suds for
s hampoo ing carpet . Only
$27 50
cash
or
terms
availab l e. Phone 992 -2653.
1969 P L YMOUTH Road runn er
in good shape , S650. See Butch
Armes, or ca ll 992 -3181
2 27 · 10tc

2·191fc

~;~~;;DA -;L~25~ .. ~n~bb; es .'2 set s of gears and expans1on
chamber . Sel ling at a lo ss .
Phone 99 2 5323 .

INFORMATION ABOUT:

JOB OPPORTUNITIES
SOCIAL SECURITY
CONSUMER PROTECTION

AND
GREAT COUNTRY

PAC I F IC ISS Reloader and
wor k bench, set up for 12
gaug e AA shel ls . Includes
It haca Model 37 12 gauge
pump with case and c l eaning
kit . Phone 992 5323
2 26 ·3tp
P ICKU P
tru ck
topper .
panell ed . l ights , factory built.
1 year old Phone 992 -7132 .
2 26 4tc

STEREO
Walnut
AM FM
Rad io, 8 tra c k tape com
bination . Ba l ance $1 10. 73 , or
terms avai lab le Phon e 992
3965 .
2 1-1 lfc

Pels For Sale
AKC To y Poodl e puppt es . $75
Si ame se kittens. $15 Phon e 1
256 63 47
2 21 26 t c

Ma son , W .Va.

EXPERIENCED

ONE 1972 K1ngwood Esta t e
Stat ion Wagon . 9 pa sse nger , 1
lo cal owner. Phone Wayn e
Milhoan , 992 5602 .
2 24 61p

Real Estate For Sale
DESIRABLE two bedroom
hou se in Middlepor t. ready to
occupy Call 992 53 10.
1-31 26tc
SI X RO OM house with bath ,
c ity wat er, co a l furnac e. 3
ac r es. near the Pomeroy Go lf
Cours e Phon e 992 3944.
2 25 -3tc
NEW J bedroom nom e, P '1 bath ,
ga rag e, basement on Grave l
H i ll , M i ddleport . Natural gas
already in . P hon e Da t e
Dutton. 99"2 -3369, eveni ng s
992 2534 .
1 17 -tfc
2 yEAR OLD "J4)(24 cei ling ,
hom e . Elec tr1c heat . For
more in tormat 1on, ca\ 1 773
5503 .
OL DER home, under $5,000, ha s
gre at future
Major im
Pr ovem e n t s ins1dc , n ee d s
pa int ins1de and out . L aid out
like a new home
Full
ba sement and ga r age Phone
992 5335.
2 24 61C

NEW J bedroom hom e, good
water , 6 acres , 3 outbu l ldmo s
and ce llar . Off Me igs Co unty
I, on William Sm1th Road 3 11,
mi les from Sa l em Center .
1 27 26tp

Pomeroy

9~'2 - 2174

BLO CK S bored and a ll repatrs
on sma ll engtnes , W tl kinson
Sm n ll Eng tne Sal es , 399 W
Matn St , PhOne 992 3092.
7 6 76 \c
OPE N , Roger Hyse ll 's Garage,
near Crossroads on St . Ro ute
1211 . a· 30 to 6 p m Monday
tt1ro ugh Sa tu rday Pnone 992 ·
5682 or 99 2 7121
"J 22 26 tc
W I L L tnm or cu t trees
shrubbery . A lso . clean
ba semen ts. atl ics , et c.
Qd9 322 1 or 742 4441
22

See or Call
Bob or Roger Jeffers
Day 992 -7089
Night 992-3525
or 992·5232

Ph . 992· 5271
lincoln Hill- Pomeroy ,

0.

Painting A Specialty
Area's Mosl
R easonable Prices

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

and
ou t
Cal l
26tc

NEW HOM ES . ROOFS , AND
REMODELI NG
F-or fr ee
estimates , ca ll 992 6064 or 992
6680 .

Real Estate For Sale
bi -Leve l and spl it
level hom es ar e now under
co nstruction on ci t y wa t er
a nd sewer . M a ny de lu)(e
fea t ures includmg a ir con
ditioning . Best f i nan c ing
ava i lab le. Oth er type homes
in differ en t a r eas on F .H
A dm . fina n c ing with no down
paymen t . Call co l lect (8 37
6540) or write to MEIG S
DEVELOPMENT , P 0 . Bo x
33, M iddleport , Ohio, -15 760
1-9 tfc

~ PAC I OUS

TEAFORD
Vtrqil B . Tt· af o rd . Sr.

All work guaranteed
'
C BRA DF ORD, Auctio neer
Com pl ete Service
Phon e 949 -3821
Raci ne , Ohio
Cri tt Bradford
s . l -Ife
EXCAVA TING . dozer, loader
and backhoe work , septic
ta nk s insta ll ed ; dump trucks
and lo boys fo r hire . will haul
fi l l d ir t, top sol i, limestone
and gravel. Call Bob or Roger
Jeffe r s , day phone 992 -7089 ;
n1ght phone 992 3525 0!;. 992
5232
,.. 2 11 -tfc
DOZER wo r k , land ctEfaring by
the a cr e hour l y or contract ,
farm ponds , roads, etc. Large
dozer and operator w ith over
20 years experience Pullins
Excavati ng, Pomeroy, Ohio .
Phone 992 -2478.
A"U11JIVfOBILE Insurance been·
Los!
your
c ance ll ed?
opera tor's li ce nse . Ca ll 992
7428
6 15 -tfc
SEWING M AC HINE S. Repa ir
se rv ic e, all makes, 992 -2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy
Au thor i zed Sing er Sales and
Servi ce. We Sh a rp en Scisso r s
3 -29 -tfc
PRICE
CO NSTRUCTION .
Rooting, spouting , kitchens ·
and bathrooms Comp let e
remode lt ng . Pnone 742 .6273 .
,
12-3-ffc
DOZER and ba c k hoe work,
pond s and sep ti c tanks , dlt ·
c h lng ser vice. toP SOtl, fill
dirt, limestone; B&amp;K E x cavati ng . Phone 992 5367 or
992 -3861
9 1 tf c

Brnk•'r
11 0 Ml'ch,Ht •c Slrt'l'l
Pomeroy, OhiO ·l'l769

BRAND NEW-

3

bedrooms,

11h baths, e lectric heat . Storm
doors a nd windows . Garage
and near ly an a c r e $22,000.
2 APARTMENTS.- One up with
1 br . and 2 bedrooms down
Ful l base ment. Gas furna ces

READY -MIX
CO N CRE TE
de livered right to
your
project . Fast and easy Free
estimates . Phone 992 -328 4.
Goeg l e ln Ready -Mix Co ,
Middleport. OhJo.
6-30-tf c

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED

$20,000 .00

REASONABLE rates, Ph . 446 ·
4782, Gallipol is, John Russell
Owner and Operator .
5 -12 -tfc

COUNTRY HOME - Modern&lt;

SEPTIC

br s. , a ll paneled hom e, large
bath, l arge kitch en . d in ing .
Only a few yr s old .-$ 18,000 00.

NEAR GAVIN - 3 bed room s.
bath, ga s furna ce, nice out .
building with ce lla r, ·and lot
R~a so n able offer
RENTAlS One w ilh 6
bedrooms, a 3 bedroom trailer
and a 1 bed room trailer .

ALL OF THE SE ARE GOOD
BUYS. COME IN AND HAVE
A LOOT.
608 E.

MAIN
POMEROY,
SYRACUSE - Large 2 story

TANKS.

AROBIC

SEWAGE
SYSTE MS
CL EANED ,
REPAIRED .
M IL LER
S ANITAT IO N,
STEWA RT, OHIO . PH . 662·
3035 .

IO·Hfc

SE PTIC
TANK S cleaned .
Modern San ltatlon , 992 -3954 or
992 -7349 .
10· 23 -tfc
BACkHO E Ser¥ice, CHARLES-·
R HATFIELD ,
Route 1,
Rutland. Ohio, 45775. phone
7.42 -6092 W11ter lines , footers,
and trenches 24 hours , 7
day s a week .
2-7 26tp
"NEIGLER S FOR BUILDING
HOUSES . We'll draw pr ints
or
build
to
your
specifications
Ne igler's
Bu i ld i ng Supply, Racine,
Ohio . Ca ll 949 3604 .
2 s 26fc

o-

frame. 7 rooms . 2 bath s. 4
BR .
Riv e r
f ront age .
Ba se m en t . N ew FA ga s
furn ace,
new
co pper
p l umbing .
Garage

$10.500.00.

SYRACUSE- Love ly 2 yr .

o1 d home. Al l new homes in
thi s area. 3 nice BR. double
clo sets . Co l ored bath W·
sho wer . Bea utiful kitchen
w1th cabinets &amp; range.
Utility R . HW floors . Some
carpeting . Drapes. Carport
w .storage . $19,900 .00

B io Capacity
Maytag
Automatics
2 speed operation .
Choice of water
temps. Auto. water
level contro l. Lint
F ilter or Power Fin
Agitator.
Perm a-Press
Mayta9
Halo of Heat
Dryers
Surround
clothes
wlth gentle , e¥en
heat . No hot spots ,
no overdrying. Fine
Mesh Lint Filter
We Specialize in

TUPPERS PLAINS - 1971

Mob ile Home bought new in
'72. 12 x60, 1/ :;o acr e ground .
Carpe ted , 2 BR . Ba th Like

new. JUS T $6.50000.
77 ROUGH ACRE 5- Close
to Forked Run Lak e. C1ty
water avai la bl e. Idea l for
hom e
or
tr ailer .
A1 1
m in er a l s
Full
price

MAYTAG

Red Carpet
Service

$9.000.00

RAISE TH E CURTA IN ON
ANEW TYPE OF LIFE BY
OWN IN G PROPERTY. TO
BUY OR SELL SEE US.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
992·2259

RUTLAND FURNITURE
742·4211

Arnold Grate

Rutland

If no answer 992 -2568

MONTGOMERY WARD &amp; C0:-1
(Serving America for 100 Years)
Offers an exciting opportunity to operate a business of
your own with a very small investment. We are interested in a qualified Sales oriented person with
previous retail experience to own and operate a catalog
store in Pomeroy, Ohio.
If you are willing to accept responsibility in return for a
future in your own business, write giving full personal
qualifications to :

E. A. Smith, 4-1
1000 S. Monroe Street
Baltimore, Maryland 21232

$TEREO
92.1 FM
WMPO
M

From t he larges t Truck or
Bu l ldozer Radiator to the
sma l lest Heater Core
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

Ph.

Water Lines and Power
Lines . All work done by the
foot or contract . Also doter
work and septic tanks in stalled .

Gene's
Body Shop

Auto sales

2 17 26 t C

Rlv'ERSIDE Inn , now open
und e r new man agement of TWO small rooms , fur ni shed . SINGE R sew1 n g ma chin es 1972
Sp r ing Avenue, coupl es on l y .
mode l in beauti f ul walnut
Fred (Sirml Mtllet Everyone
Call Sunday or evenings, 992
ca binet Makes d esign sti t
come and br ing your friends 1
3.129
ches, zig zag, buttonholes,
2 24 6tp
2 24 -Mp
blmd hems, el c L 1ke n ew
On ly $89 95 . Call Ravenswood
WILL buy furn itur e and mer ·
273 952t or 273 9893 after 5. 00
TRA IL ER. Brown's Trailer
chandise at Polly' s AuctiOn
127 -tf c
House. Addison . Phone 992 Park. , Phon e 992 -3324 .
2 26 tf c
3509.
2-20 -7tc
GROCERY busme ss lor sa l e
UNFURNI SHED a partm ent. 2
Bui ld ing for sa l e or lease .
Ar ... NOUN C IN G new hours tor
b edroom s, elec tri c h eat.
Phone 773 -5618 from 8 30 p.m
income tax serv 1ce . Open only
Hartford , W . Va . Phone 773 to 10 p .m . for appointment .
on Monday , Wednesday and
5975 .
3 20-tfc
Friday
9
a.m .
to
5
2-21 -tfc
p m . Evening s by app t
F OR SA LE . Large leve l lot o n
Wanda Eblin , Co Rd 22, off 2 BEDROOM mobile nom e, a ll
N ew Lima Road, Ru tland . A ll
Route 7 byplJSS Pnone 992
uti l it ies paid No pets . Robert
ultlit1es available Phone 742 2212.
H il l. Racine, Phon e 9A9 38 11.
3083
2 21 12tp
2 8 30tc
2 1.tf c
HARRI SO N'S TV and Serv1ce
ca l ls Phone 992 -2522.
2 n 26tc

TV

2 24 tf c

Mi~port-Pomerov -

'

•

co lor

GOOD USED

Notice

MATERIALS CO.
773 -5554

992 ·2094

8.30 am . to 5:00pm. Da ily .
8 · 30 a .m. to 12 : 00 N oon

Card of Thanks

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

POMEROY
'HOME &amp; AUTO

•I Door. au to .. P.S .• P .B.

per

Sa~urday .

Built to Your ' Spec s.
De livered to Job Site

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

3c .

BLIND ADS
Addit ional 25t Charge
Advertisement .

.

On Most Am e ncan Cars

lost

Mrs. Lillian Lee and other
relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Thereon
Johnson spent several days
visiting'relalives in Akron, Mr .
and Mrs. Kenneth Konicek and
fannily in Cleveland and Mr.
and Mrs. Scott Wheeler and
family In Lucasville.
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Simpson
and children of Baltimore
spent over the holiday weekend
with their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Chester Simpson and Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Badgley.
The Esther Missionary
Circle of First Baptist Church
mel at the home of Mrs. Ralph
Badley Monday evening, Feb.
ld, at 6:30 p. m. for beans and
cornbread supper. The regular
meeting followed. Mrs. Gretta
Simpson, president, opened by
reading scripture. The group
sang "In the Service of the
King". Scripture was from
Acts. 9. Vera Beegle read a
poem, "Love Thyself Last"
and Mrs. Bikacson read
"Hands That Minister." "More
Uke the Master" preceded the
business session. A program
was presented by Mrs. Isabel
Simpson including readings
"Wagging Their Tales Behind
Them,"
.. Growth
of
Christianity" in three . parts
"To Me to Uve Is Christ",
"Key 73", "Mass Meetings",
11
Jewish Criticism," ulsrael",
"Nagaland. Baptist Centennial", "Baptisms, •r "A
Ugh! to Encourage Others",
11
5 for Bacone" in three parts.
Program closed with prayer· by
Mrs. Edna Pickens. After
discussion on finishing the lap
robes, the meeting closed with
singing "My Prayer."

=~~~~~·-=======~===========;~==========~
EXPERT
ASK us ABOUT
DITCHING SERVICE
PRE-FABRICATED

Motor Co•

QU A.ILIJY

Bttsiness Services

..
I

�',

8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeruy, 0 ., Feb. 2i, l!li 4

Amanda Casper
died VVe£Lnesday

_in Briefs
•
•
•
t Continued from page 1)

News

moving lower as speculators engaged in profit tak~ng . The metal
dropped by $6 an ounce in zw·ich. however, where it also reached
a record level Tuesday. The U. S. dollar fell slightly m most

Amanda
Cas pf. r .
84.
Pomeroy , died early toda y at
Arcadia Nur si ng Home i n
Coolville .

markets.

The daughter of the late

~

Ja cob and Cather ine Durst
Werry, was also preceded in
death by her husband, Albert ;
one son , Leo, and two brothers,
Charlie and Henry Werry .
She is survived by two
daugh ter s,
Mr s.
Rob ert
(Mildred) Arnold, Minersville ;
Mrs. Roy (Lucretia) Smith ,
Pomeroy, Rt . 3; two sons,
Herman Casper , Davton, and
Theo Casper , Rossvil le, Il l.:
one brother , Herman Werry ,
Pomeroy :
seven
grand ·
ch ild re n, and four great ·
grandchi ldren .
Mr s. Casper was a member
of the Pomeroy Tr ini ty Chur ch .
Funeral services will be held
Friday at 3 p.m. at Ewing
Funeral Home with buria l in
Beech Grove .cemetery . The
Rev . Wilbur Perrin will of .
ficiate. Friends may cal l at the
funera l home after 7 p .m .

I
MILWAUKEE , WIS. - A UNITED AIRLINES plane was
forced into an emergency landing here Tuesday by a passenger
who apparently went berserk at 33,000 feet and st."ted slashmg
at people around him with a blunt knife.
Two men received superficial cuts before one of them - who
said he was a movie stunt man - knocked the·attacker out with a
kara te chop . Herbert E. Hoxie, special agent in charge of the FBI
office here, identified the man as Robert Slutsky, 31, of Far
Rockaway, N. Y., and said he would be charged today by federal
authorlties 'with crime aboard an aircraft-assault with a dead ly
weapon.

WASHINGTON - GENERAL MOTORS, Standard Oil and
Firestone Rubber and Tire Co. purposely destroyed rapid transit
in Los Angeles during the past 35 years, Mayor Thomas Bradley
charged today . In testin10ny subm itted to a Senal£ antitrust
committee in a letter , Bradley sa id the three companies "in a
very calcula ted fashi9n " destroyed the world's largest inU!rurban electric ra ilwa. system. It provided swift, ine.pensive
and pollution-free commuting in an area now almost to tally
dependent on the automobile, he said .
.
Bradley testified that two years aft.!r GM, Sta ndard Otl and
Firestone organized Pacific Transit Lines in 1938, the firm began
to acquire and scrap the Pacific Electric System. which ran
trolleys over 1,164 miles of track in more than 50 commumties,
stretching 75 miles north, south and east of Los Ange les. The
downtown street car C&lt;Jmpany was acquired by another subsidiary of the big three firms, he said, and it scrapped the electric
cars, tore down the JXlWer transmission lines, uprooted. the
tracks "and placed GM diesel buses fue~~ by Standard Oil on
Los Angeles ci ty streets."
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in down-

town Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
Wednesday was 37 degrees
under sunny skies.

C hoose Keepsak e
wi th compl ete confid ence.
becau se the f&lt;~ m o u .s
Keepsa ke G ua ra ntee
assure s a pe rfect
eng&lt;1 grm ent dia mon d
of precise cur and
superb color. There is
no finer diamond ring.

today.

AUTO DAMAGED
RACINE - The Racine Fire
Dept. answered an alarm at
7:35p.m. Tuesday when a car
ca ught fire . The 1969 Buick
owned by Bill Cornell of Portland and valued at $2,500 apparently caught fire when a
cigarette fell on the seal. Loss
was estimated at $600. The car
was cove red by insurance.
THROWN OFF HORSE
RACINE - The Racine E-R
squad aided Sharon Cogar, 20,
Pomeroy, when she was
thrown from a horse she was
riding in Racine at 8 p.m.
Tuesday . Miss Cogar was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital with back and head
injuries.
SALE TWO DAYS
RACINE - The Racine E-R
squad will hold a rummage
sale all day Friday and
Saturday, March I and 2 in the
former Simpson Bldg. here.
Coffee and doughnuts will be
sold Saturday. The sale is to
help raise money for the new
emergency truck.
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES
Mrs .
Junior Gillispie , daughter ,
Point Pleasant; Clennie
Farmer, Leon; Mrs. Fred
Slenker, Carl Lieving, Point
Pleasant; Schane Hesson, New
Haven; Eugene Stewa rt, Point
Pleasant; John Chapman,
Gallipolis Ferry .
BIRTHS - Feb. 26, a
daughter to Mr. and Mrs.
James Harmon, Rutland, 0.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Chance of snow nurries
northeast portion on Friday
and fair an Saturday with a
chance of rain or snow on
Sunday. Highs near 30 in the
north and around 40 in the
south on Friday -imd lows In
the 20s and by Sunday highs
in the 40s and lows In the 20s.

Absenteeism
down slightly
Absenteeism in the schools of
th e Meigs Local District
dropped 3.3 percent Wed nesday when classes resumed
following a day of dismissal
( Monda y ) brought on by
illness. Today 23.27 percent
of the study body was absent
compared to 26.5 percent
Tuesday.
Absenteeism was still running high in some schools,
however. Highes t rate was at
the Rutl and Elemen tary
School were 91 of lhe 226
students (40.3 per cent), were
abesent.
At
Pomeroy
Elementary, 139 out of 393 were
absen t, (35.4 percent ). At
Salisbury School, 55 out of 178
were absent (30.9 percent).
Attendance in some schools
was improved . The junior high
school dropped to 11 .8 percent
and at Salem Center 12.5
percent.

Weaver
• t
reJeC
s 0 ,JU,J er
.
CLEVELAND (UP! )- Oh10
Sta te Umvers1ty Athleti c
Director Ed Weaver, saymg
football games belong ~n the
campuses, Tuesday reJected
an offer to move the Oct. 5 Oh1o
State-Washington State game
from Pullman, Wash . to
Cleve l and's Muni c ipal
Stadium .
Browns owner Art Modell
had offered the two schools a
$400,000 package to hav~ .'he
game played at Mun1c1pal
Stadiwn .
·
" I'm perplexed and confused ," Modell sa id after
Weaver rejected the offer.
"But I will go on to other
things. Ohio Slate is not in our
plans whatsoever."
"I think football belongs
basically on the campuses,"
Weaver said . "Playing in
Cleveland would get away
from our basic concept of
playing on the campus or in the
home city of a t.!am."
The game is currently
scheduled to be played at
Washington State's 21,554-seat
stadiwn in Pullman, or at
Seattle in the University of
Washington' s·-~8 ,946-sea t
facility.
NOW YOU KNOW
Orthodox churches be gin
Lent on a Monday and do not
observe Ash Wednesday .

converse
COACH
Gold , Navy. Ugh! Blu e. Red ,
Green. Purple, Black and
White.

SAVE sso RIGHT NOW ON TWIN t1 FULIISIZE
BEMCO MEDI-REST'SUPREME MAn~ SElS

heritage house
" Your Thom MeAn Store"
Middleport, 0.

Students make bicentennial medallions
Over 60 entri ec&lt; in the Ohio 200-year history of the United
Americ3'11 Revolution Bicen- States. This year's medallion
tennial Advisory Commission will be based upon the earliest
Medallion Design Contest have period of Ohio history, exbeen completed by Meigs High tending through the American
School art studenls of Mrs. Revolution to the signing of the
Margaret Ella Lew is.
Treaty of Paris in 1789.
The competition , open to all
In the state judging,
Ohio high school studen ts, will scholarship granls of $1,5011,
be held an nually through 1976. $750 and $250 will be awarded
The rt.~dallion design is to to the three students who have
honor Ohio's contribution of lhe prepared the best medallion
design.
Certificates
of

recognition will be issped by
the Ohio Bicentennial Commission to all student participanls.
Lincoln Mint sculptors will
produce a specia l edition
medallion based upon the
winning entry.
Although local enbies were
judged, lhe entire group of
des igns prepared by' local
studenls will be sent into the
slate competition.

.I

'.
'.

Winning first place honors at
Meigs High for a des1gn
featuring the Ohio River ' ~n
Indian in a canoe and the Oh!O
hills was Anita Hermann
while second . place ~ent
to
John
Pat
Riley·
Cash prizes of $5 and $I

were awarded the winners.
Judges were James Diehl,
principal, and Martha Husted
and John Redovian of lhe ·
faculty . Riley's entry is a
charcoal design of Fort
Recovery .

Nixon won't
(Continued from page I)
the prosecutor now has decided
not to follow up with a subpoena for Nixon's appearance
for ~wo reasons :
- Primarily it was thought
Nixon would refuse the subpoena, just as he has one from
Ca lifornia.
- Jaworski believes the
proper constitutional inquiry
into presidential conduct lies in
the impeachment process.
But sources said it was
"possible, even probable" that
some defendants in future
Watergal£ criminal. cases will
seek to subpoena the President
as a defense witness at their
trials. Indictments are likely
this week.
St. Clair's Warning
Ehrlidunan and two other
former White House aides,
David R. Young and G. Gordon
Liddy, face trial in Los Angeles
on charges growing out of the
1971 burglary at the office of
Pentagon Papers defendant
Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist.
Ehrlichman's lawyers sought
to subpoena Nixon as a defense
witness through the District of
Columbia Courts.
Declining the subpoena, in a
letter to D.C. Superior Court
Judge Harold H. Gree ne,
presidential lawyer James D.
St. Clair said Nixon's appearance "woold open the door for
un fe ttered and wholesale
imposition upon the office of
the President."
Two major questions still
face the prosecution force:
~Whether to recommend
that the grand jury name
Nixon as an unindicted coconspirator in the Watergate .
cover-up. There is no apparent
co nstitutiona l ban on such
action.
~Whether to subpoena 40
tapes and other White House
documents !hat St. Clair, has
refused to turn over to
Jaworski.
It remained to be seen what
the Wat.!rgale grand jurors
would do. Under the law they
do not have to follow the
prosecutor's advice but can
subpoena witnesses or hand
down indictments on their own.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Henry R.
Klein, Pomeroy ; Glenna Little ,
Middleport ;
Wi lli a m
Ste phen so n , Pomeroy ;
Virginia Pickens, Portland ;
Frances Howe ry, Albany;
Raliegh Sayre, New Haven;
Perry Hoffman, Middleoprt;
Robert Bishop, Rutland ; Saron
Cogar, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGES - Frederick
Weaver, Norman Smith,
Crystal Jacobs.

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUN. MAR. l, WHILE QUANtiTIES LAST
MEN'S
WRANGLER

AT M&amp;R BUILDING CENTER

LADIES'

SLEEP GOWNS

FLARE

SLACKS

PRICES
EFFECTIVE

""GE

THRU MAR. 2

STEAM

OPEN
%DAILY

•

$6!!

IRON

Closed
Sundays

Co lori ng s are pale a nd fhey' re
frosted with lace . sheer luxu·
ry fo r your waking and sleeping hours. Pink , blue. rnint in
sizes S-M· l. li ttle thing s mak e a

ASSORTED
PATTERNS
SIZES 29-38

$777
HECK'S REG. 19.97

~· ... ' he"''' q.,ulo!1 ''"'"""

~ ,., '""' "'"dP o f , ""'+"" "bl•• ~---,£.!..~ :.~'' --:1..
A~ Q'"'\1 \e&gt;/0"1''&lt;1 poly ~· ~· ·

big diffe rence in any wom a n\

\~a&lt;, •·t' ~"

wa rdrobe.

"' '"'" ' "'"' • • 1 hlcl col'"'"

~Ml ~ l

Regul arly

•OIHI col 0 o1 ~·&lt;I "• •'&lt;hm&lt;t '' "'

HECK'S REG .
$3.99

HD63

L~DIES'

•
fm·or ite

bi~ i n is

or briefs in nylon st ret ch.
Size s of 5·7. V...hi te &amp; pastel s.

PRO STYLE
HAIR DRYER
e

.f'ltOCTOR SILEX
12 CUP GLASS

e

Makes 12 cups of your favorite coffe e . A
beautiful add ition to your kitchen .

PARTICLE
BOA-RD

JEWElRY DEPT.

s9''
.

'&gt;&lt;.uo•~ '•~"" '•• tt P.,h ... ,J' , f• m' "'l'"''"" r ..,11 vu• fWI&lt;' &lt;&lt;&gt;I&lt;&gt;•
&lt;&lt;&gt;n l&lt;'"' '"''"' ~ ~l.ool•• ] •I fully • ou•pp&lt;'d lo 'II"&lt;' y&lt;.ou booo uM.,I

e

&lt;olor ~·&lt; l u &lt;" ' '" u ~~'"''" Thttr \ un • 1 ~ 1"&lt; ~y~ o•'&lt;l oiNhor&gt;o&lt;

' t"'""' lo&lt;

&lt;Hft 0 /0 1"!" e•I&gt;OIU &lt;!I

IIIW'Il/IYDEPT.

..

HECK'S REG. 19.99

•.

....
AUTO TAPE PLAYER

CASE

.

~' ~·

WITH 4 SPIAICERS

FOR

~\'£, ~J:-

20-30·40

• •

......
- * &amp;.trod - ..... ..,. '""""' ~
with -m .. """' ,..,_ ....... J ..........

ESSEX

POCKET INSTAMATIC

sw._......
,..etl1 . ot-. bo-. •ond......._.111....-...M
AI....:""
... _ , c:hDMIII

...... "q.otlll..-4" . . . 4 ..........
toN.

HEATING PAD

$CAMER,,

$2''

HECK'S REG. $2.44

HECK'S REG. 13.99

JEWElRY DEPT.

Custom t w o slice, end contro l toaste r in
pol ished ch rorne with bloc k end pane ls.

LADIES

~

GABARDINE PANTS

The latest thing for spring in a ssorted styles and col or~.
Ranging in si~es from 5-13. f oro life style of cas ual com-

CHOICE

fort.

HECK'S REG.
11.88 EA.

ClOTHING
DEPT.

CAMPAIGN SET
The Middleport Business and
Professional Wom en's Club
will conduct a door-t~oor
campaign for the Heart Fund
drive from I to 4 p.m. Sunday
in Middleport.

~so·7~:::~~

5

500 Pieees ..

66

:t~ ::'!~

TOY DEPT.

$

1

i

i'

SUPER HEROES

zig· zag
.sewing·machine

Select
Ooose From
. Bob y in Corry·AII,
Non.:y and Bohy Niley·Nilo::

Sews buttonholes,

' '""'" 6495 '"""'"74 ::ee
TWIN SIZE

SHUll

$199.90

""' •et

pe r nt

NOW

~f:ce

NOW

sew:; on

HECK'S REG.
$1.21 EA.

buttons,

overedges,
mends .. .
withou t attachment s.

.,.

GREAT BUY AT ANY PRICE'• eonstruet•onQIYHyou
BomcoQ~iltor.ama ' Postureiwllh oKCius;ve Heallh-0 -Matlc '
a supple surface, deep·down flrmnell.

INGELS FURNITURE
OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHTS

.1

SELSUN
BLUE
HECK'S
REG.
58'
CDSMfflC

............. ' 68'

3 STYLES

MIDDLEPORT

~
~

~

We have a C redi t Plan de"&gt;igned to fit your hudRet.

~

We al so ha.e aliber:it rade -;n-policy.

. , , .0 , 0 . , , . : 0 " " '

The Fabnc Shop

TOYD{PT.

CHOICE

88th

from Batman, Superman

HECK 'S
REG.
84'

Each
TOY DEPT.

CHOICE

6'6(

HECK'S REG .
$1.68

COSMETIC
DEPT.

DEPT.

LADIES'

GIRLS'

BLOUSE

BRUSH DENIM
SLACKS

Beautiful short slee'f'e poly~ cotton knit blou s·
es. Blouses have cardigan front with tie in
bock or front. Solids &amp; Prints in size'&gt; S·M·l.

or Spider·

moo

$466
HECK'S REG.$5.88

ClOTH/It&amp; DEPT.

KAOPECTATE
ANTIDIARRHEAL

77c

Here ore the young looks you want . . . an

easy core wardro be of these brv"&gt;h denim
slacks in sizes 7-14. ASsorted prints, checks,
and plaids .

HECK'S
REG.
$4.99 PR.

ClDJ'IIIB
691.

$]~.~

oz.

-

ka p tall'

HECK'S
REG.

99'

70Z.

ULTRA BRITE
TOOTHPASTE
lli!JIIlar or Cool Mini

HECK'S
REG.

POMEROY
1!5W.2nd

Phone 992-2284

-.
•
•,

'I

'

oz.

SO's

HECK'S REG. 84'

Carrying case
or cabinet extra
FASHION MATE•

PH. 992-2635

4

BAYER
ASPIRIN

HECK'SREG. 99' EA.

REG.

'5499
HECK'S REG. 169.96

DEPT.

9~c~

77'

.. .. ... -- ...

$977
HECK 'S REG. $13 .96

. ... .............77(

Grnt ~llitn ~unlr

Game inc ludes 8 1h" hoop, 4"
ball, and nylon net.

.....,, ,,.,......... .......
~ ~

8

t·

$699

' lt ' o

•·q•topp•ol l, &gt;r ' '"' '"''' ' ""h "Q !70 oto(ll r

:::.~ 5 26 99

94.95

a

l&gt;, 10d o! VI!\ OU • I&lt;~UU•• l Q I ~ t lol" o

wl,, l, " '" """ yuu UJ&gt; 1o ~~" .. on •udo p" !Uie you l&lt;1 k ~

'

Regularly
$179.90 per set.

Piece

WALL
CLOCK

POLAROID SQUARE
SHOOTER II

INLAND
QUAD

&lt;&amp;

~~

CLOTHING
DEPT.

Gentle min - penetrate~ hair lor foil, long Ia it·
ing sets,
Tou.:h N' Tilt Hood- write, reod or
wot~h TV wtth the hood in juill he r ig.ht positio n.
Remote con rr ol - .: honge heat ieled ions righl in
'{our hond.

PERCOLATOR
HECK'S
REG.
12.96

INGRAHAM

HECK'S REG .
99' PAIR

Per

&amp;

REG. •29.88

CLOTHING DEPT.

BIKINI
PANTIES

HECK'S REG.
$2.38

4

._..,r----.--.-4

HECK'S REG. $5.99

95

i

, , ,., ,,,

HECK'S
CLOTHING DEPT.

P208B

full
..
sa:e

$159.90 per set.

MUNSEY
BROILER
OVEN

HECK'S REG.
$9.99

PUFF BASKETBALL
CAME

sa:e

NE500CC

MEN'S
B!TTER
QUALITY
KNIT
SHIRT

JIGSAW PUZZLES

twin
.

PLENTY FREE PARKING

�',

8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeruy, 0 ., Feb. 2i, l!li 4

Amanda Casper
died VVe£Lnesday

_in Briefs
•
•
•
t Continued from page 1)

News

moving lower as speculators engaged in profit tak~ng . The metal
dropped by $6 an ounce in zw·ich. however, where it also reached
a record level Tuesday. The U. S. dollar fell slightly m most

Amanda
Cas pf. r .
84.
Pomeroy , died early toda y at
Arcadia Nur si ng Home i n
Coolville .

markets.

The daughter of the late

~

Ja cob and Cather ine Durst
Werry, was also preceded in
death by her husband, Albert ;
one son , Leo, and two brothers,
Charlie and Henry Werry .
She is survived by two
daugh ter s,
Mr s.
Rob ert
(Mildred) Arnold, Minersville ;
Mrs. Roy (Lucretia) Smith ,
Pomeroy, Rt . 3; two sons,
Herman Casper , Davton, and
Theo Casper , Rossvil le, Il l.:
one brother , Herman Werry ,
Pomeroy :
seven
grand ·
ch ild re n, and four great ·
grandchi ldren .
Mr s. Casper was a member
of the Pomeroy Tr ini ty Chur ch .
Funeral services will be held
Friday at 3 p.m. at Ewing
Funeral Home with buria l in
Beech Grove .cemetery . The
Rev . Wilbur Perrin will of .
ficiate. Friends may cal l at the
funera l home after 7 p .m .

I
MILWAUKEE , WIS. - A UNITED AIRLINES plane was
forced into an emergency landing here Tuesday by a passenger
who apparently went berserk at 33,000 feet and st."ted slashmg
at people around him with a blunt knife.
Two men received superficial cuts before one of them - who
said he was a movie stunt man - knocked the·attacker out with a
kara te chop . Herbert E. Hoxie, special agent in charge of the FBI
office here, identified the man as Robert Slutsky, 31, of Far
Rockaway, N. Y., and said he would be charged today by federal
authorlties 'with crime aboard an aircraft-assault with a dead ly
weapon.

WASHINGTON - GENERAL MOTORS, Standard Oil and
Firestone Rubber and Tire Co. purposely destroyed rapid transit
in Los Angeles during the past 35 years, Mayor Thomas Bradley
charged today . In testin10ny subm itted to a Senal£ antitrust
committee in a letter , Bradley sa id the three companies "in a
very calcula ted fashi9n " destroyed the world's largest inU!rurban electric ra ilwa. system. It provided swift, ine.pensive
and pollution-free commuting in an area now almost to tally
dependent on the automobile, he said .
.
Bradley testified that two years aft.!r GM, Sta ndard Otl and
Firestone organized Pacific Transit Lines in 1938, the firm began
to acquire and scrap the Pacific Electric System. which ran
trolleys over 1,164 miles of track in more than 50 commumties,
stretching 75 miles north, south and east of Los Ange les. The
downtown street car C&lt;Jmpany was acquired by another subsidiary of the big three firms, he said, and it scrapped the electric
cars, tore down the JXlWer transmission lines, uprooted. the
tracks "and placed GM diesel buses fue~~ by Standard Oil on
Los Angeles ci ty streets."
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in down-

town Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
Wednesday was 37 degrees
under sunny skies.

C hoose Keepsak e
wi th compl ete confid ence.
becau se the f&lt;~ m o u .s
Keepsa ke G ua ra ntee
assure s a pe rfect
eng&lt;1 grm ent dia mon d
of precise cur and
superb color. There is
no finer diamond ring.

today.

AUTO DAMAGED
RACINE - The Racine Fire
Dept. answered an alarm at
7:35p.m. Tuesday when a car
ca ught fire . The 1969 Buick
owned by Bill Cornell of Portland and valued at $2,500 apparently caught fire when a
cigarette fell on the seal. Loss
was estimated at $600. The car
was cove red by insurance.
THROWN OFF HORSE
RACINE - The Racine E-R
squad aided Sharon Cogar, 20,
Pomeroy, when she was
thrown from a horse she was
riding in Racine at 8 p.m.
Tuesday . Miss Cogar was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital with back and head
injuries.
SALE TWO DAYS
RACINE - The Racine E-R
squad will hold a rummage
sale all day Friday and
Saturday, March I and 2 in the
former Simpson Bldg. here.
Coffee and doughnuts will be
sold Saturday. The sale is to
help raise money for the new
emergency truck.
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES
Mrs .
Junior Gillispie , daughter ,
Point Pleasant; Clennie
Farmer, Leon; Mrs. Fred
Slenker, Carl Lieving, Point
Pleasant; Schane Hesson, New
Haven; Eugene Stewa rt, Point
Pleasant; John Chapman,
Gallipolis Ferry .
BIRTHS - Feb. 26, a
daughter to Mr. and Mrs.
James Harmon, Rutland, 0.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Chance of snow nurries
northeast portion on Friday
and fair an Saturday with a
chance of rain or snow on
Sunday. Highs near 30 in the
north and around 40 in the
south on Friday -imd lows In
the 20s and by Sunday highs
in the 40s and lows In the 20s.

Absenteeism
down slightly
Absenteeism in the schools of
th e Meigs Local District
dropped 3.3 percent Wed nesday when classes resumed
following a day of dismissal
( Monda y ) brought on by
illness. Today 23.27 percent
of the study body was absent
compared to 26.5 percent
Tuesday.
Absenteeism was still running high in some schools,
however. Highes t rate was at
the Rutl and Elemen tary
School were 91 of lhe 226
students (40.3 per cent), were
abesent.
At
Pomeroy
Elementary, 139 out of 393 were
absen t, (35.4 percent ). At
Salisbury School, 55 out of 178
were absent (30.9 percent).
Attendance in some schools
was improved . The junior high
school dropped to 11 .8 percent
and at Salem Center 12.5
percent.

Weaver
• t
reJeC
s 0 ,JU,J er
.
CLEVELAND (UP! )- Oh10
Sta te Umvers1ty Athleti c
Director Ed Weaver, saymg
football games belong ~n the
campuses, Tuesday reJected
an offer to move the Oct. 5 Oh1o
State-Washington State game
from Pullman, Wash . to
Cleve l and's Muni c ipal
Stadium .
Browns owner Art Modell
had offered the two schools a
$400,000 package to hav~ .'he
game played at Mun1c1pal
Stadiwn .
·
" I'm perplexed and confused ," Modell sa id after
Weaver rejected the offer.
"But I will go on to other
things. Ohio Slate is not in our
plans whatsoever."
"I think football belongs
basically on the campuses,"
Weaver said . "Playing in
Cleveland would get away
from our basic concept of
playing on the campus or in the
home city of a t.!am."
The game is currently
scheduled to be played at
Washington State's 21,554-seat
stadiwn in Pullman, or at
Seattle in the University of
Washington' s·-~8 ,946-sea t
facility.
NOW YOU KNOW
Orthodox churches be gin
Lent on a Monday and do not
observe Ash Wednesday .

converse
COACH
Gold , Navy. Ugh! Blu e. Red ,
Green. Purple, Black and
White.

SAVE sso RIGHT NOW ON TWIN t1 FULIISIZE
BEMCO MEDI-REST'SUPREME MAn~ SElS

heritage house
" Your Thom MeAn Store"
Middleport, 0.

Students make bicentennial medallions
Over 60 entri ec&lt; in the Ohio 200-year history of the United
Americ3'11 Revolution Bicen- States. This year's medallion
tennial Advisory Commission will be based upon the earliest
Medallion Design Contest have period of Ohio history, exbeen completed by Meigs High tending through the American
School art studenls of Mrs. Revolution to the signing of the
Margaret Ella Lew is.
Treaty of Paris in 1789.
The competition , open to all
In the state judging,
Ohio high school studen ts, will scholarship granls of $1,5011,
be held an nually through 1976. $750 and $250 will be awarded
The rt.~dallion design is to to the three students who have
honor Ohio's contribution of lhe prepared the best medallion
design.
Certificates
of

recognition will be issped by
the Ohio Bicentennial Commission to all student participanls.
Lincoln Mint sculptors will
produce a specia l edition
medallion based upon the
winning entry.
Although local enbies were
judged, lhe entire group of
des igns prepared by' local
studenls will be sent into the
slate competition.

.I

'.
'.

Winning first place honors at
Meigs High for a des1gn
featuring the Ohio River ' ~n
Indian in a canoe and the Oh!O
hills was Anita Hermann
while second . place ~ent
to
John
Pat
Riley·
Cash prizes of $5 and $I

were awarded the winners.
Judges were James Diehl,
principal, and Martha Husted
and John Redovian of lhe ·
faculty . Riley's entry is a
charcoal design of Fort
Recovery .

Nixon won't
(Continued from page I)
the prosecutor now has decided
not to follow up with a subpoena for Nixon's appearance
for ~wo reasons :
- Primarily it was thought
Nixon would refuse the subpoena, just as he has one from
Ca lifornia.
- Jaworski believes the
proper constitutional inquiry
into presidential conduct lies in
the impeachment process.
But sources said it was
"possible, even probable" that
some defendants in future
Watergal£ criminal. cases will
seek to subpoena the President
as a defense witness at their
trials. Indictments are likely
this week.
St. Clair's Warning
Ehrlidunan and two other
former White House aides,
David R. Young and G. Gordon
Liddy, face trial in Los Angeles
on charges growing out of the
1971 burglary at the office of
Pentagon Papers defendant
Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist.
Ehrlichman's lawyers sought
to subpoena Nixon as a defense
witness through the District of
Columbia Courts.
Declining the subpoena, in a
letter to D.C. Superior Court
Judge Harold H. Gree ne,
presidential lawyer James D.
St. Clair said Nixon's appearance "woold open the door for
un fe ttered and wholesale
imposition upon the office of
the President."
Two major questions still
face the prosecution force:
~Whether to recommend
that the grand jury name
Nixon as an unindicted coconspirator in the Watergate .
cover-up. There is no apparent
co nstitutiona l ban on such
action.
~Whether to subpoena 40
tapes and other White House
documents !hat St. Clair, has
refused to turn over to
Jaworski.
It remained to be seen what
the Wat.!rgale grand jurors
would do. Under the law they
do not have to follow the
prosecutor's advice but can
subpoena witnesses or hand
down indictments on their own.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Henry R.
Klein, Pomeroy ; Glenna Little ,
Middleport ;
Wi lli a m
Ste phen so n , Pomeroy ;
Virginia Pickens, Portland ;
Frances Howe ry, Albany;
Raliegh Sayre, New Haven;
Perry Hoffman, Middleoprt;
Robert Bishop, Rutland ; Saron
Cogar, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGES - Frederick
Weaver, Norman Smith,
Crystal Jacobs.

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUN. MAR. l, WHILE QUANtiTIES LAST
MEN'S
WRANGLER

AT M&amp;R BUILDING CENTER

LADIES'

SLEEP GOWNS

FLARE

SLACKS

PRICES
EFFECTIVE

""GE

THRU MAR. 2

STEAM

OPEN
%DAILY

•

$6!!

IRON

Closed
Sundays

Co lori ng s are pale a nd fhey' re
frosted with lace . sheer luxu·
ry fo r your waking and sleeping hours. Pink , blue. rnint in
sizes S-M· l. li ttle thing s mak e a

ASSORTED
PATTERNS
SIZES 29-38

$777
HECK'S REG. 19.97

~· ... ' he"''' q.,ulo!1 ''"'"""

~ ,., '""' "'"dP o f , ""'+"" "bl•• ~---,£.!..~ :.~'' --:1..
A~ Q'"'\1 \e&gt;/0"1''&lt;1 poly ~· ~· ·

big diffe rence in any wom a n\

\~a&lt;, •·t' ~"

wa rdrobe.

"' '"'" ' "'"' • • 1 hlcl col'"'"

~Ml ~ l

Regul arly

•OIHI col 0 o1 ~·&lt;I "• •'&lt;hm&lt;t '' "'

HECK'S REG .
$3.99

HD63

L~DIES'

•
fm·or ite

bi~ i n is

or briefs in nylon st ret ch.
Size s of 5·7. V...hi te &amp; pastel s.

PRO STYLE
HAIR DRYER
e

.f'ltOCTOR SILEX
12 CUP GLASS

e

Makes 12 cups of your favorite coffe e . A
beautiful add ition to your kitchen .

PARTICLE
BOA-RD

JEWElRY DEPT.

s9''
.

'&gt;&lt;.uo•~ '•~"" '•• tt P.,h ... ,J' , f• m' "'l'"''"" r ..,11 vu• fWI&lt;' &lt;&lt;&gt;I&lt;&gt;•
&lt;&lt;&gt;n l&lt;'"' '"''"' ~ ~l.ool•• ] •I fully • ou•pp&lt;'d lo 'II"&lt;' y&lt;.ou booo uM.,I

e

&lt;olor ~·&lt; l u &lt;" ' '" u ~~'"''" Thttr \ un • 1 ~ 1"&lt; ~y~ o•'&lt;l oiNhor&gt;o&lt;

' t"'""' lo&lt;

&lt;Hft 0 /0 1"!" e•I&gt;OIU &lt;!I

IIIW'Il/IYDEPT.

..

HECK'S REG. 19.99

•.

....
AUTO TAPE PLAYER

CASE

.

~' ~·

WITH 4 SPIAICERS

FOR

~\'£, ~J:-

20-30·40

• •

......
- * &amp;.trod - ..... ..,. '""""' ~
with -m .. """' ,..,_ ....... J ..........

ESSEX

POCKET INSTAMATIC

sw._......
,..etl1 . ot-. bo-. •ond......._.111....-...M
AI....:""
... _ , c:hDMIII

...... "q.otlll..-4" . . . 4 ..........
toN.

HEATING PAD

$CAMER,,

$2''

HECK'S REG. $2.44

HECK'S REG. 13.99

JEWElRY DEPT.

Custom t w o slice, end contro l toaste r in
pol ished ch rorne with bloc k end pane ls.

LADIES

~

GABARDINE PANTS

The latest thing for spring in a ssorted styles and col or~.
Ranging in si~es from 5-13. f oro life style of cas ual com-

CHOICE

fort.

HECK'S REG.
11.88 EA.

ClOTHING
DEPT.

CAMPAIGN SET
The Middleport Business and
Professional Wom en's Club
will conduct a door-t~oor
campaign for the Heart Fund
drive from I to 4 p.m. Sunday
in Middleport.

~so·7~:::~~

5

500 Pieees ..

66

:t~ ::'!~

TOY DEPT.

$

1

i

i'

SUPER HEROES

zig· zag
.sewing·machine

Select
Ooose From
. Bob y in Corry·AII,
Non.:y and Bohy Niley·Nilo::

Sews buttonholes,

' '""'" 6495 '"""'"74 ::ee
TWIN SIZE

SHUll

$199.90

""' •et

pe r nt

NOW

~f:ce

NOW

sew:; on

HECK'S REG.
$1.21 EA.

buttons,

overedges,
mends .. .
withou t attachment s.

.,.

GREAT BUY AT ANY PRICE'• eonstruet•onQIYHyou
BomcoQ~iltor.ama ' Postureiwllh oKCius;ve Heallh-0 -Matlc '
a supple surface, deep·down flrmnell.

INGELS FURNITURE
OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHTS

.1

SELSUN
BLUE
HECK'S
REG.
58'
CDSMfflC

............. ' 68'

3 STYLES

MIDDLEPORT

~
~

~

We have a C redi t Plan de"&gt;igned to fit your hudRet.

~

We al so ha.e aliber:it rade -;n-policy.

. , , .0 , 0 . , , . : 0 " " '

The Fabnc Shop

TOYD{PT.

CHOICE

88th

from Batman, Superman

HECK 'S
REG.
84'

Each
TOY DEPT.

CHOICE

6'6(

HECK'S REG .
$1.68

COSMETIC
DEPT.

DEPT.

LADIES'

GIRLS'

BLOUSE

BRUSH DENIM
SLACKS

Beautiful short slee'f'e poly~ cotton knit blou s·
es. Blouses have cardigan front with tie in
bock or front. Solids &amp; Prints in size'&gt; S·M·l.

or Spider·

moo

$466
HECK'S REG.$5.88

ClOTH/It&amp; DEPT.

KAOPECTATE
ANTIDIARRHEAL

77c

Here ore the young looks you want . . . an

easy core wardro be of these brv"&gt;h denim
slacks in sizes 7-14. ASsorted prints, checks,
and plaids .

HECK'S
REG.
$4.99 PR.

ClDJ'IIIB
691.

$]~.~

oz.

-

ka p tall'

HECK'S
REG.

99'

70Z.

ULTRA BRITE
TOOTHPASTE
lli!JIIlar or Cool Mini

HECK'S
REG.

POMEROY
1!5W.2nd

Phone 992-2284

-.
•
•,

'I

'

oz.

SO's

HECK'S REG. 84'

Carrying case
or cabinet extra
FASHION MATE•

PH. 992-2635

4

BAYER
ASPIRIN

HECK'SREG. 99' EA.

REG.

'5499
HECK'S REG. 169.96

DEPT.

9~c~

77'

.. .. ... -- ...

$977
HECK 'S REG. $13 .96

. ... .............77(

Grnt ~llitn ~unlr

Game inc ludes 8 1h" hoop, 4"
ball, and nylon net.

.....,, ,,.,......... .......
~ ~

8

t·

$699

' lt ' o

•·q•topp•ol l, &gt;r ' '"' '"''' ' ""h "Q !70 oto(ll r

:::.~ 5 26 99

94.95

a

l&gt;, 10d o! VI!\ OU • I&lt;~UU•• l Q I ~ t lol" o

wl,, l, " '" """ yuu UJ&gt; 1o ~~" .. on •udo p" !Uie you l&lt;1 k ~

'

Regularly
$179.90 per set.

Piece

WALL
CLOCK

POLAROID SQUARE
SHOOTER II

INLAND
QUAD

&lt;&amp;

~~

CLOTHING
DEPT.

Gentle min - penetrate~ hair lor foil, long Ia it·
ing sets,
Tou.:h N' Tilt Hood- write, reod or
wot~h TV wtth the hood in juill he r ig.ht positio n.
Remote con rr ol - .: honge heat ieled ions righl in
'{our hond.

PERCOLATOR
HECK'S
REG.
12.96

INGRAHAM

HECK'S REG .
99' PAIR

Per

&amp;

REG. •29.88

CLOTHING DEPT.

BIKINI
PANTIES

HECK'S REG.
$2.38

4

._..,r----.--.-4

HECK'S REG. $5.99

95

i

, , ,., ,,,

HECK'S
CLOTHING DEPT.

P208B

full
..
sa:e

$159.90 per set.

MUNSEY
BROILER
OVEN

HECK'S REG.
$9.99

PUFF BASKETBALL
CAME

sa:e

NE500CC

MEN'S
B!TTER
QUALITY
KNIT
SHIRT

JIGSAW PUZZLES

twin
.

PLENTY FREE PARKING

�•

•

•

• • •

• t

•

~

'I

'

I

I

11 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

OPEN DAILY
10 TO 9

FREE

' I

Feb. 27 1974

..

OPEl DAILY
10109

I.'
J

I

J)\

Heck's Reg.

53~

.,

Reg. '5.99

e

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.
·

MAIL BOX

t

~

I

--..--....--

. liGHT
DIMMER
SWITCH
un ~ rdn •Oiicn

;t

3 l/4 GAL.

Foooil ho""hold 'P'"Y'"9'

for flie~. mosqui toes, pou l-

.
k
try o nd I1ve sloe sp roy
Thr ow~ strong fine sproy.·

e fu!l Chrome Plo 1od Blodu S..r·

rolec 10 Pre•e"' Slippin9

e Hondy

Thvmb Operoled&lt;lo!i"gJorch e A. rlro&lt;•.ve

r•lfo"'

••nyl grip1 wi rh hM·

hoi~

HARDWARE
DEPT.

$ 200

HARDWARE
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
$14.66

RED
DEVIL

. GAL.

OUTDOOR

HECK'S

REG. ,

HARDWARE DEPT.

$18.88

$}599

F.bergloH rod

$699

s 11 ~~

HECK'S REG. $9.99

HECK'S REG.

REG. $15 .99

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

#413

·TRUE
TEMPER
RJBULAR
SPIN
CAST

SPIN CAST
ROD

$1099

19.99

fo!~I,. BRUSH
ba,.

$

300
·

HARDWARE
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
$3.99

HECK'S REG.
$4.88

HARDWARE DEPT.

WALKER
6'3"

SPIN

$5~9
HECK'S REG. '7.99

SPORTS DEPT.
PLASTIC

/

HECK'S REG.
$6.99

SPORTS DEPT.

ZEBCO

REEL

e Polished st a inless steel co~ers e An ti-re verse, clic k, ad ivsto ble d rag • l ine insta lled on interchangeable \ pool e Two·
piece 6' tubular glos s rod e Mag num butt settion, Carboloy

2 PIECE VINYL

CENTURY REEL

HOOSIER 5'x7'

METAL

CANVAS TARP

ACKLE BO

99

$·

HECK's
REG .
$13.99

B

HECK'S REG.

'6.66

HECK'S REG. •3.18
DEPT.

•s••

SPORTS
DEPT.

SPORTS
DEPT.

. 3 LB. POLY

LEY

'

ULTRA LIGHT
o~n

ltue soinnong

· ~ I ,,

•dfof lor !he no,;ct

u •ec&lt;md •o r lloo the r •pt"• ! All

u lu n dnum

~·

lt un•o.

Thermocloud Synthetic Fiberfill. Durable

01

Ulld

spuntex top material. Cotton lining.Zip·

""'" wo! h " ' ""' ""'oil•&lt; l, n.,h_ f •l ~mu l boo l :!.n •uullo
1 6~

yord1 of 8 lb "'''

""'"9"

WASHABLE
SLEEPING BAG

,, 435

SPIN REEL
l hi1

rlrog lone &lt;nono ty o f

•266

$3.79

King size ¥e rsion of the popular Jo hnso n Cen tu ry
reel. Famous Joh nson Centu ry feature s include
Selectro -Dio l drag action, duol onti -rever$e.

HECK'S REG. $12.97

ONE
TRAY

STORM SUIT
H!~::s $279

JOHNSON

$899

SPORTS
DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

VINYL

$129

HECK'S REG. 94'

?

99

33 SPIN CAST

69(

HECK'S REG.
$3.99

TACKLE BOX ~,, ,
$ 99 ;\

'20.88

PONCHO

CHAIN
STRINGER

ROD
$299

ROD

HECK'S REG .
$13 .99

5

$

HECK'S REG

TRUE
TEMPER

per clo&amp;ure.

·' lr · l~n•!

,,,.. Detcuhnblelwndl• lo• '" "Y
Wr11.1h• cnl y 6
or1 310 I 9"tlf rUioo for a poweolul •etror.•e

$799

SPORTS
DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $10.99

.

SJ099

~-r~~~r-r-DIPR~E~STTtO~NwE:I--~~~-t-===~~
DE-ICER

REAR

SHOCK
SPRINGS
UP TO 750 LB.
CAPA&lt;;ITY

CHROME PLATED

2 $1

LICENSE PLATE

$400

HOOD AND TRUNK

LIGHT

PROTECTS

when ! r un~ or hood is open · fili aU cor~ · ·
equipped with mercury switch lor smoothe r opera·
lion .

f.~~~tll$

HECK'S REG .
$2.29

AUTDMDTIVEDIPT.

$200 '

BOOSTER
CABLES

FOR

PLATE

Light~

$200

HECK'S REG. 8t

SPORT GRIP

Moci~ ol omo&gt;;ng "'"' Po•o!MOfrm-··ID&lt;Ikt lib ltothe t. leelo
btner .lc•tllongf&lt;. ~'&lt;fl !hoi 1porh ,.....,lloo~ .

HECK'S REG.

$

HEAVY-.N_O TANGLE

'400
HECK'S REG.
$4.99

' AUTOMOTIVE DEiT.

•

•

I

SPIN
ROD

SPINNING
ROD

2-BURNER
STOVE

HECK'S REG.
$3.31

S]OO

dow n v.i!h ' TOl!ble lr~~ O&lt;CU IU 'Y ( 1 u&lt;nm O(lro iO ' ' ·.'100&lt;II" n 'ltl l(lltl

·y uwo" ..t' ,\" uvcobl e e ye u llowl :lOO " "9'"" umoho""'\l

HARDWARE DEPT.

ULTRA
LIGHT

2 pie(e

ANTIQU · PAINT

,,.. fn\le•l ~""~ '' ,. ~ thoo h " ' de•~!c,.eo !o &lt;o&lt;'•N I o~-. ou i!IM r
'• 11~' •o o u1or&gt;U!O&lt; :1 4 hou• '""""' :uro• hyt.t &lt;;r o • &lt;lu \0 . o l' • ol

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

MESS KIT
$189

4"
GOLD EAGLE

po poc aod &lt;hw" lo!O .

HECK'S
REG.
$5.66

I

...

ti p

LIGHT CONTROL

HECK'S REG.
$5.99

5 PIECE

SPORTS DEPT.

steps, some day. Included
ore bose coot, g lal e, ~and -

HARDWARE DEPT.

"\

SPIN CAST
ROD

HECK'S REG. $2.29

LATEX
HOUSE
PAINT
I GAL. CAN-WHITE ONLY
HECK'S REG.
$2.99

SNMrs

J'

j

PURPOSE

on

HECK'S REG.
$5.66

'

H:~::s

$19.99

COLEMAN DELUXE

TANK
SPRAYER METAL
CUTTERS

n"'&gt;od' l•g ~t

~0'\ ~- nil '"" " 'h.

'

'

ALL

lets you antique in two easy

rep!{}(e'J or d•

c

I

$1599
,.,

'..
'.

~~

SHAMPOO &amp; BATH

N•w

&lt;&gt;II 1&lt;1e&lt;:ll fo r o n1r' g. en!r· loonony

,..

' '

J

SPORTS DIPT.

ar,•tJ . 'eli ·oog~ &lt;on trol • l•ght
hon• C to 600V- ~1t f- u g~"' ' " !c•
O n~~ - ' • og~ r - 1'11 p~1r

I

.

\

HECK'S REG. $2.69

CROWN SEAL

-~~~f!!!~-+--!!:_HA~R~O~~~~·:E~D~EP~T·:...:._-I ~·I HOUSEPAINT
, .f.~~ . /
..

o l lhc

$

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

oz.

$200
6

-i

99

dy hong·up

HECK'S REG.

loc: &lt;nn " "'' "")

HECK'S REG .
$21.88

4ft

HECK'S REG.
86'

RURAL

~
,·I

'

,

l
i\

I

SOUTH BEND

1-Qt. Covered Saucepan , 2-Qt . Covered Saucepan 10-l n.
Open Fry Pan , Covered Sa uce Pot (Cover of Sa uce FIQI also
f its Fry Pan!)

TOP JOB CLEANER

OVEN BAKED -SA TIN BLA CK ORWHITE
RUST PROOFED • FUll PI ANO HINGE
24-KT. GOlD PLATED EMBl E.V. STYLE AN D
DURAB ILITY UNITED

I

'i

SPill REEL

I

.,'

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

MAIL BOXES e
e

l'

''

I •

MIYCHILL 300

I

TRUE
TEMPER

COOKWARE SET

$299
28

HECK'S
REG.
$4.88

'

I

"!-

SPRAY HE~~~;~EG.
(
69

CITY

e

''

'

STAINLESS STEEL

FORK &amp; SPOON
Heck's

'

'

l

I

,;

7 PIECE

TAMPAX TAMPONS
40'S
ECONOMY PACKAGE

WOOD

1''

I

~~ ·

HECK'S REG. 89e

HECK'S REG. $1.5 8

.''

SPORTS DEPT.

59e
CHOICE

'

HECK"S REG. $2.89

PUR EX
DETERGENT

__)

·HOUSEWARE

$

oz.

49

A. See 'N Take Cake Pan
B. See 'N Take Pie Pan
C 4 Qt. Covered Sauce Pan
D. 3 Qt. Covered Sauce Pan
E. 3 Pc. Sauce Pan Set
F. 12 Qt. Dish Pan
G. 3 Pc. Range Set

FISH
CREEt

.."'

1:,

'

I'
I

'

I

'

.

I

'

"·

100 PAK
lAGLE CLAW

HOOKS

89(

HECK'S REG. $1.09

SI'OITS IJIPT.

BELT TYPE
PLASTIC

3 PLACE

LANDING
NET
$139
HECK'S REG. $1.88
~TSDEPT.

AlJTO.TRUCK
GUN RACK

$377
HECK'S REG. 4.49
1

1 QUART

CAMP STOVE

CANTEEN TOASTE
$149
HECK'S REG. $2 .39

SPHTSDIPT.

.'

99&lt;

lOQUART
MINNOW
BUCKET .

$199

WORM
BOX

89(

HECK'S REG. $1.39

HECK'S REG. $2.99

HECK'S REG. $1.19

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

SPOIITS IJIPT.

SPLIT SHOT

SINKER
SELECTOR

HECK'S
REG.
63'

·'

...

_

�•

•

•

• • •

• t

•

~

'I

'

I

I

11 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,

OPEN DAILY
10 TO 9

FREE

' I

Feb. 27 1974

..

OPEl DAILY
10109

I.'
J

I

J)\

Heck's Reg.

53~

.,

Reg. '5.99

e

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.
·

MAIL BOX

t

~

I

--..--....--

. liGHT
DIMMER
SWITCH
un ~ rdn •Oiicn

;t

3 l/4 GAL.

Foooil ho""hold 'P'"Y'"9'

for flie~. mosqui toes, pou l-

.
k
try o nd I1ve sloe sp roy
Thr ow~ strong fine sproy.·

e fu!l Chrome Plo 1od Blodu S..r·

rolec 10 Pre•e"' Slippin9

e Hondy

Thvmb Operoled&lt;lo!i"gJorch e A. rlro&lt;•.ve

r•lfo"'

••nyl grip1 wi rh hM·

hoi~

HARDWARE
DEPT.

$ 200

HARDWARE
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
$14.66

RED
DEVIL

. GAL.

OUTDOOR

HECK'S

REG. ,

HARDWARE DEPT.

$18.88

$}599

F.bergloH rod

$699

s 11 ~~

HECK'S REG. $9.99

HECK'S REG.

REG. $15 .99

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

#413

·TRUE
TEMPER
RJBULAR
SPIN
CAST

SPIN CAST
ROD

$1099

19.99

fo!~I,. BRUSH
ba,.

$

300
·

HARDWARE
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
$3.99

HECK'S REG.
$4.88

HARDWARE DEPT.

WALKER
6'3"

SPIN

$5~9
HECK'S REG. '7.99

SPORTS DEPT.
PLASTIC

/

HECK'S REG.
$6.99

SPORTS DEPT.

ZEBCO

REEL

e Polished st a inless steel co~ers e An ti-re verse, clic k, ad ivsto ble d rag • l ine insta lled on interchangeable \ pool e Two·
piece 6' tubular glos s rod e Mag num butt settion, Carboloy

2 PIECE VINYL

CENTURY REEL

HOOSIER 5'x7'

METAL

CANVAS TARP

ACKLE BO

99

$·

HECK's
REG .
$13.99

B

HECK'S REG.

'6.66

HECK'S REG. •3.18
DEPT.

•s••

SPORTS
DEPT.

SPORTS
DEPT.

. 3 LB. POLY

LEY

'

ULTRA LIGHT
o~n

ltue soinnong

· ~ I ,,

•dfof lor !he no,;ct

u •ec&lt;md •o r lloo the r •pt"• ! All

u lu n dnum

~·

lt un•o.

Thermocloud Synthetic Fiberfill. Durable

01

Ulld

spuntex top material. Cotton lining.Zip·

""'" wo! h " ' ""' ""'oil•&lt; l, n.,h_ f •l ~mu l boo l :!.n •uullo
1 6~

yord1 of 8 lb "'''

""'"9"

WASHABLE
SLEEPING BAG

,, 435

SPIN REEL
l hi1

rlrog lone &lt;nono ty o f

•266

$3.79

King size ¥e rsion of the popular Jo hnso n Cen tu ry
reel. Famous Joh nson Centu ry feature s include
Selectro -Dio l drag action, duol onti -rever$e.

HECK'S REG. $12.97

ONE
TRAY

STORM SUIT
H!~::s $279

JOHNSON

$899

SPORTS
DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

VINYL

$129

HECK'S REG. 94'

?

99

33 SPIN CAST

69(

HECK'S REG.
$3.99

TACKLE BOX ~,, ,
$ 99 ;\

'20.88

PONCHO

CHAIN
STRINGER

ROD
$299

ROD

HECK'S REG .
$13 .99

5

$

HECK'S REG

TRUE
TEMPER

per clo&amp;ure.

·' lr · l~n•!

,,,.. Detcuhnblelwndl• lo• '" "Y
Wr11.1h• cnl y 6
or1 310 I 9"tlf rUioo for a poweolul •etror.•e

$799

SPORTS
DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $10.99

.

SJ099

~-r~~~r-r-DIPR~E~STTtO~NwE:I--~~~-t-===~~
DE-ICER

REAR

SHOCK
SPRINGS
UP TO 750 LB.
CAPA&lt;;ITY

CHROME PLATED

2 $1

LICENSE PLATE

$400

HOOD AND TRUNK

LIGHT

PROTECTS

when ! r un~ or hood is open · fili aU cor~ · ·
equipped with mercury switch lor smoothe r opera·
lion .

f.~~~tll$

HECK'S REG .
$2.29

AUTDMDTIVEDIPT.

$200 '

BOOSTER
CABLES

FOR

PLATE

Light~

$200

HECK'S REG. 8t

SPORT GRIP

Moci~ ol omo&gt;;ng "'"' Po•o!MOfrm-··ID&lt;Ikt lib ltothe t. leelo
btner .lc•tllongf&lt;. ~'&lt;fl !hoi 1porh ,.....,lloo~ .

HECK'S REG.

$

HEAVY-.N_O TANGLE

'400
HECK'S REG.
$4.99

' AUTOMOTIVE DEiT.

•

•

I

SPIN
ROD

SPINNING
ROD

2-BURNER
STOVE

HECK'S REG.
$3.31

S]OO

dow n v.i!h ' TOl!ble lr~~ O&lt;CU IU 'Y ( 1 u&lt;nm O(lro iO ' ' ·.'100&lt;II" n 'ltl l(lltl

·y uwo" ..t' ,\" uvcobl e e ye u llowl :lOO " "9'"" umoho""'\l

HARDWARE DEPT.

ULTRA
LIGHT

2 pie(e

ANTIQU · PAINT

,,.. fn\le•l ~""~ '' ,. ~ thoo h " ' de•~!c,.eo !o &lt;o&lt;'•N I o~-. ou i!IM r
'• 11~' •o o u1or&gt;U!O&lt; :1 4 hou• '""""' :uro• hyt.t &lt;;r o • &lt;lu \0 . o l' • ol

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

MESS KIT
$189

4"
GOLD EAGLE

po poc aod &lt;hw" lo!O .

HECK'S
REG.
$5.66

I

...

ti p

LIGHT CONTROL

HECK'S REG.
$5.99

5 PIECE

SPORTS DEPT.

steps, some day. Included
ore bose coot, g lal e, ~and -

HARDWARE DEPT.

"\

SPIN CAST
ROD

HECK'S REG. $2.29

LATEX
HOUSE
PAINT
I GAL. CAN-WHITE ONLY
HECK'S REG.
$2.99

SNMrs

J'

j

PURPOSE

on

HECK'S REG.
$5.66

'

H:~::s

$19.99

COLEMAN DELUXE

TANK
SPRAYER METAL
CUTTERS

n"'&gt;od' l•g ~t

~0'\ ~- nil '"" " 'h.

'

'

ALL

lets you antique in two easy

rep!{}(e'J or d•

c

I

$1599
,.,

'..
'.

~~

SHAMPOO &amp; BATH

N•w

&lt;&gt;II 1&lt;1e&lt;:ll fo r o n1r' g. en!r· loonony

,..

' '

J

SPORTS DIPT.

ar,•tJ . 'eli ·oog~ &lt;on trol • l•ght
hon• C to 600V- ~1t f- u g~"' ' " !c•
O n~~ - ' • og~ r - 1'11 p~1r

I

.

\

HECK'S REG. $2.69

CROWN SEAL

-~~~f!!!~-+--!!:_HA~R~O~~~~·:E~D~EP~T·:...:._-I ~·I HOUSEPAINT
, .f.~~ . /
..

o l lhc

$

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

oz.

$200
6

-i

99

dy hong·up

HECK'S REG.

loc: &lt;nn " "'' "")

HECK'S REG .
$21.88

4ft

HECK'S REG.
86'

RURAL

~
,·I

'

,

l
i\

I

SOUTH BEND

1-Qt. Covered Saucepan , 2-Qt . Covered Saucepan 10-l n.
Open Fry Pan , Covered Sa uce Pot (Cover of Sa uce FIQI also
f its Fry Pan!)

TOP JOB CLEANER

OVEN BAKED -SA TIN BLA CK ORWHITE
RUST PROOFED • FUll PI ANO HINGE
24-KT. GOlD PLATED EMBl E.V. STYLE AN D
DURAB ILITY UNITED

I

'i

SPill REEL

I

.,'

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

MAIL BOXES e
e

l'

''

I •

MIYCHILL 300

I

TRUE
TEMPER

COOKWARE SET

$299
28

HECK'S
REG.
$4.88

'

I

"!-

SPRAY HE~~~;~EG.
(
69

CITY

e

''

'

STAINLESS STEEL

FORK &amp; SPOON
Heck's

'

'

l

I

,;

7 PIECE

TAMPAX TAMPONS
40'S
ECONOMY PACKAGE

WOOD

1''

I

~~ ·

HECK'S REG. 89e

HECK'S REG. $1.5 8

.''

SPORTS DEPT.

59e
CHOICE

'

HECK"S REG. $2.89

PUR EX
DETERGENT

__)

·HOUSEWARE

$

oz.

49

A. See 'N Take Cake Pan
B. See 'N Take Pie Pan
C 4 Qt. Covered Sauce Pan
D. 3 Qt. Covered Sauce Pan
E. 3 Pc. Sauce Pan Set
F. 12 Qt. Dish Pan
G. 3 Pc. Range Set

FISH
CREEt

.."'

1:,

'

I'
I

'

I

'

.

I

'

"·

100 PAK
lAGLE CLAW

HOOKS

89(

HECK'S REG. $1.09

SI'OITS IJIPT.

BELT TYPE
PLASTIC

3 PLACE

LANDING
NET
$139
HECK'S REG. $1.88
~TSDEPT.

AlJTO.TRUCK
GUN RACK

$377
HECK'S REG. 4.49
1

1 QUART

CAMP STOVE

CANTEEN TOASTE
$149
HECK'S REG. $2 .39

SPHTSDIPT.

.'

99&lt;

lOQUART
MINNOW
BUCKET .

$199

WORM
BOX

89(

HECK'S REG. $1.39

HECK'S REG. $2.99

HECK'S REG. $1.19

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

SPOIITS IJIPT.

SPLIT SHOT

SINKER
SELECTOR

HECK'S
REG.
63'

·'

...

_

�'.
\
. ..

.•

. 13 - The Daily

. I

Sent11~·l, Mipdiej&gt;lrl~Ro~:erof.o.', ~:,J·b; 2r.l!W4 • ol'¥1fl·,.~~··rit.~~~M~OS!.'-'*''.!&amp;:,,. .,~,:,~:::&lt;':"&gt;'~::i:':r-:·===-~

0: -: -

Te~.~~· ~~eg ..

6

.WEONES'Ii~.
YrF.t'B.l~ 1,'7~ ;
a,

·
News 3, 4,

oosonality
- &amp;

'· ·.' ·: . . •
io. · 15·;. A·s·!". Ne\'1 1 · 1i:~.Soil~rfle 'st:.20• Per.

Behavioral

dt!Velop"ri1en.f3~.;· ~ru~h· or - ~on~eQ . 4. &gt;.

f ~~~1~1tf;i~~h~o~J~;~~~~FJ.~{~~~is ~~~ 1}i~~~o~:~

OPEl DAllY

7:30 - To Tell the Truth 6 ; Sale of the Century B; The Judge 10 ;
Beat the Clock 13 ; Police Surgeon 3; On the Money 4 ; Antiques 20 ; Episode Action 33; Area Mayor 's Report 9.
8:00 - Sonn\'.1&amp; Cher 8, 10 ; Bill Moyer s' J~Jurnal20 ; Chase 3, 4,
15; Washington Connection 33; The Cowboys -6. 13.
8: JO - Movie "Unwed Father" 6, 13 ; Theater In Am erica 33;
Unquiet Death ol Julius and Ethel Rosenberg 20.
9: 00 - Cannon 10, 8; Movies " The Thomas Crown Affair " 3, 15,
" Coogan's B1uff" 10.

OF FREE

10 TO 9

PARKING

10:00 - Koiak 8, 10 ; News 20 ; Doc Elliott 6, 13.
10:30 - Doy at Night 33.

DISPOSABLE
CIGARElTE:
LIGHTER
.J

11 : 00 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15 ; Janaki 33.
11 : 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; Marilyn Remember ed 6, 13;
Movies " The Five Man Army" B; " The Main Attract ion" 10 .
1: 00 - Tomorrow 4 ; News 13.
2: 00 - News -4.

EVEREADY

TRANSISTOR
BAnERIES

.:.

6:00 -

6: 15 - Ameri ca' s Problem£. 10 .
6: 25 - Farm Report 13. ·
6:30 - Bible Answers 8; Patterns for Living 13; News 6 : F ive
Minutes to Live By 4.

"D" AND " C"

II

60 MIN.
CASSElTE TAPE

LEATHER
MONEY CLIP

REEL&amp; CAN

WATCH
BANDS

HECK'S
REG.

$100

2·0·$100

sug

400FT.

$100

$100

ASSORTED
NYLON

DUAL 8

6:45 -

4:~.$}

Jeff's Collie 6.
8:25 - Jack Lalanne 13 .

FLASH CUBES
$100

HECK'S REG.
29' EA.

8:30 - Brady Bunch 6.
8:55 - News 13.

9: 00 - Paul Dixon 4; AM 3; Ph il Dona hue 15; Abbott &amp; Cos tel lo
8 ; Friendly Junction 10 ; Wild, Wild West 6 ; Biography 33 ;
Movie "Mr. Hobbs Takes A Vacation " 13.
'
9:30- To Tell the Truth 3; Secret Storm 8.

9:55- Chuck White Reports 10.

JEWElRY DEPT.

JEWElRY DEPT.

Farmtime 10 ; Morning Report 3.

7: 00 - Today 3, 4, IS ; News 8, 10; Dick Van Dyke. 13; Pixan ne 6.
7: 30 - Rocky &amp; Bullwinkle 13 ; Ne w Zoo Revue6 .
8:00- - Capt. KangarooS . 10: Sesam e St. 33: New Zoo Revue 13;

SYLVANIA
REGULAR

HICK'S REG. 15' EA.

HECK'S REG. 11.49

HECK'S REG. 11.99

6:35 - Columbus Today 4.

SIZES
AVAILABLE

rn .

THURSDAY, FEB. 28.19i4
Sunrise Sem inar 4 ; Sacred Hea rt 10.

10: 00 - Dinah Shore 3, 15; Joker's WildS, 10; Company6.

10o30 - $10,000 PyramidS, 10 ; Jeopardy 3, 4, 15.

u·~-I.e'P. ... ..IJ. . e. ·1·..p .

: ·: ,

16 oz.

~·· ·· ·

1 ,..,

I -

RAID
ANT

CAP TYPE

&amp;

OIL FILTER

lf&amp;"x 180'

WRENCH

MASKING

88¢

ROLLS$100
FOR

KILLER

8

HICK 'S REG. 41 1 EA.

$100

HECK 'S REG. 28 '

Split Second 6 ; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10; Baffle 3, 15.

1:00 - All My Children 6, l:l; Concentration 8; News 3; Not For
Women Only 15 ; What's My Line? 10.
1:30 - 3 On A Match 3, 4, 15 ; As the World Turns 8, 10; Let's
Make A Deal 6, 13.
2: 00 - Day ~ of Our Lives 3, 4, 15 ; Guiding Light 8, 10 ; Newl ywed

Game 6, 13 .
2:30- Dodors 3, 4, 15; Edge of Night 8, 10; Girl in My Life 6, 13.
3:00 - Masterpiece Theater 20; Another World 3, 4, 15 ; General

Hospital 6,

$1 °~ach

13;

Price Is Right

8,

10.

3:30 - One Life to Live 6, 13 ; Phi l Donahue 4; How to Survive A
Marriage 3, 15 ; Match Game 8, 10.
4:00 - Sesame St. 20, 33 ; Mr. Cartoon - The Banana Splits 3;
Somerset 15 : Speedracer 6; Love, American Sty le 13 ; Movie
" 3: 10 to Yuma" 10.
4:30 - Gilligan's Is. 6, 13 ; Green Acres 3; Bonanza 15; Jackpot
4; Hazel 8.
5:00 - Mister Rogers 20, 33; Andy Gr iffith 8; Mi ss ion lm possible6; Bonanza 3; Merv Griffin 4 ; Gomer Pyle , USMC 13.

HECK'S REG. / 1.39
1

HECK'S REG. $1.48 EA.

AUTOMOTIIIE DEPT.

HARDWARE DEP1.

Pa ssword 6; Bob Braun 's S0-50 Club 4 ; News 8, 10. 13 ;

12:4s- Elec. Co. 33.
12:55 - NBC News 3, 15.

AMBER OR CLEAR
(HOICE

.

Jackpot 3, 15.

12 : 30 -

MALLET

CLEARANCE
LIGHT

JEWElRY
DEPT.

FOR

8. 10.
11 :55- CBS News 8; Dan Imel's World 10.

RUBBER

$100

LIMIT B

11 :30- Brady Bunch 13; Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15 ; Love of L ife
12 : 00 -

FILM

ROACH

DROP
CLOTH

TAPE

l

HECK'S REG. 11.38

9'x12'
PLASTIC

LARGE

KODAK
CX126-12
KODACOLOR
PRINT

5:30 - Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec. Co. 33 ;

QUART

1"-2" -3"
PAINT BRUSH
SET

PPO
TRANSMISSION
FLUID

SJ_OO
•

FESCO

5

ASTICWARE

HECK'S REG. $1.99

Laundry
Basket
B. Bowl Bru&gt;h
and Hold••
C. 12 Qt. Pail
D. 15 Quart
Dishpan
E. 19 Quart
Wastebasket

.,

7:30 - Hollywood Squares 3; Wild Kingdom 10 ; To Tell the
Truth 6; Ozzle' s Girls 8; Beat the Clock 13 ; Zoom 20; Johnny

WIN AT BRIDGE

.,

NORTH

AUTOMOTIIIEDE1'1.

8

CANS

'AQ43
+AQ87
4AK52
WEST
EAST
.93
.42
'K752
1098
+t0542
+KJ93
4J86
4Ql07
SOUTH IDI
.AKQJt0865

'J

tJ~

• •B~

Throw llown a Losing Hand
Dear Helen :
Every two or three monflls, my husband goes on a binge that
puts us up to our necks in debt.
He takes all our mooey, the car which enables me to get to
work, and gambles until he goes broke. Then he starts selling our
furniture, to buy booze, broads, and a good time.
Afterwards, he ends up at his mother's who gives him what
he needs to finish up, Sometimes she bails him out of jail.
His mother has even stooped so low as to come with him to
our house while I'm working and help him haul off an air conditioner, radio, TV , stereo- things I've booght on my salary. She
gives him the money for them and keeps them at her house.
He is very abusive to me an~ my kids (they aren't. his) .
Besides slapping me around, he accuses me of going out on him,
which I don't.
It's my car, but he won't let me use it except to·go to work . He
won't allow me to have friends or phone calls, but he does
anything he pleases, including calling up his Mama and talking
for about an hoor every night
He won't stay with Alcoholics or Gamblers Anonymous - flle
binges mean too much to him. Besides, with Mama fllere, he
never really has to face up to his problems.
What can I do• I ~mmbled thai my love would change him,
and I - LOST
Dear LOST :
Agood gambler knows when to throw down a losing hand. I'd
pass the deal to Mama and get out of the game! - H.

+++

Dear Helen;
"Thinker" asked why blacks weren't allowed to adopt
handicapped or racially mixed children. They are, and they do '
1 am black single man who recently adopted a little boy I
found in Vietnam. He's dark like me, but his race doesn't matler.
He's my son! - PROUD FATHER
Dear Helen: •
Since we have adopted a black Vietnamese child, have three
natural children, and are currently awaiting the arrival of
another hard-tQ1llace Asian (handicapped) child, I feel I can

ansWer "Thiiiker's" letter.
Her f1rst point was that while families are "w-ged" to adopt
handicapped ormixed.;ace children . Not so! Many people aren't
emotionally capable of raising such children and welfare
workers carefully screen applicants, probably even more
thoroughly fllan ·they do for healthy while babies.
Her secood point was the "affluent" blacks should adopt
them. The amount of money a family makes has little to do with
approval for adoption. Much of our furniture comes from auction
sales or thrift stores. Our car is eight years old. The year OW'
child arrived from Vietllllm, our total annual income was $4,000.
Mann 15; Readi ng for the Classroom Teacher 33 ; Dealer 's
Choice 4.
B: OO - Cheaper One 6. 13 ; Mov ie " Hello, Doll y!" B. 10 ; Behind
the lin es 20, 33 ; Flip Wilson 3, 4, 15.
8: 30 - Firehouse 6, 13.
9: 00 - Ironside 3, 4, 15 ; Kung Fu 6, 13 ; Black Journal 10 ;
WMUL-We Are Your Business 33 .
10 : 00 - News 20 ; What ts Man 33; Str eets of San Fran cisco 6, 13 ;
Music Country USA 3, 4, 15.

11 : 00 - News 13 ; Janaki 33; News 3, 4, 6, 15 .
11 : 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 15, 4; Alan King On Sunset Strip 6, 13,
Mo11ie "The Last Hurrah" 10.
1: 00 - Tomorrow 3, 4; News 13 .
2:00 - News 4

s
.I

WITH
LEMON

I

PISTOL GRIP
HOSE
NOZZLE

$100

POTTING SOIL .

10

HECK'S
REG. Sl,33

$100
HECK'S REG. '1.77

4 QT.

9" PAN
AND ROLLER
SET

17~

North

East

Pass

4N.T

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

-,,.

8

ULTRA
BAN

$100

I

HECK'S REG. $1.99

HOUSEWAREDEPT.

ASSORTED

4

LETTER GALORE
BOXED STATIONERY

2

BOXES$1
FOR

oz.

PLUS4
BOlUS
OUICES

.INUCTOR

BLADES
1 5'5

FOR

HECK'S REG. 31 1 EA.
HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

00

5000

PLUS
PLATINUM

$100
HECK'S REG. $1 .94

HECK'S REG. 99' EA.
/IOt/SEW~RE IJEI'T.

COSMETIC DEPT.

24 oz.
JOHNSON'S

BABY POWDER
HECK'S
REG.
$1 .48

$1 00

.REGULAR
.UNSCENTED
.POWDER

SJOO
HECK'S REG. $1.34

17 OZ. REVLON

BALSAM
SHAMPOO
NORMAL-ONLY

H:~~:s $ -~

00

$1.68

I

COSMET/t DEPT.

·

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words .

34. -Tin-

iCHEKT

o!
luggage
37. Break the

The bidding has been:
West

North

East

Pass

2N.T.

Pass

Tin

1

r)

IMACINA

I

pound
barrier

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:

III

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
A euFWeN ONE:
MIGHT eE.T A &amp;COP
D5AL OUT OF,

ISOPPEO~
V
I I
I;·=:·I=::t:,~=====~-~~-~·=·~
~~~·:•~ted

·=-

IL___!!Ps111=-:'

Jumhl•" LINEA
l' etlerdar'•

by the abon cartoon.

I 0 [ I Xl )
(Aiuwen tomorrowt

THYME

apostrophes, the length and format~on of the word s are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

CRYPTOQUOTES

Now arr&amp;nrelhe clrclod lellen
to form the surprl1e UtJwer, u

AIISW8...

One letter simp ly stands for another . In this sample A is

used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.

CUDGEL

FAULT·Y

TZNAYXR
TGMX

EMX

EQZ

DOOR ISN'T

THE M AU~
LOOI&lt; JU~T LiKE
THE BOJI.I E HEAP
~RUrE

YO U"VE
SEE- tJ . -WHO

ATTACKED ME
1 QN1 6 HT :

-HMM ... NO ONE EVE!?
OFFERED TO TACKLE

7HAT M~~ I;EFORE

DADDY'S TRYIN6 TO MARRY

ON L'i A FOOL
A B ANDON S H 1'5

DECtPED TO FIND
MY C»&gt;N Hl..l~AND,

M'Y5TERY MfJ.N,

MANHCXJD

WHEN FACED
B'/A B IT OF
I

.. RN" FER

?RINCIPA"'S
Office

5lTTIN6 ON THE BENCH

511lf THE PRINCIPAL'S OffiCE
15 NOT 0"~ Df6~ADI N6,
lr'S ALSO 0AN6EROIJS ..

1.

1

You, South, hold:

What do you do now?
have 11 balanced pain''· Don't

try for a slam.

-•"'

'

.•

.....~-;........________

----~ ---'--·--~C---~---"--~~~-.:---..:..-

'•

NAZ

Yl

NAZ

(!C 1~74 Kinr Featu-ru Syndicate,lne.)

LOCI&lt;EOf

PAINTING !&gt; ...

Yl

TZTYQK. - QGHEQYV
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: MONEY IN A FOOL'S HAND EXPOSES HIM WORSE THAN A PlED COAT.-LORD HALIFAX

\ An-e" Certainl11 an eve·open~r!- THE LID

THE &lt;S-E ("fiVE'

AESGNR

ZOYMYTGZR

.A K 7 6 'A K 7 6 U2.K 10 3

,

24. Quadruped

35. Piece

'1:1
South

A-Bid 11iree notrump. You•

Cantrell

23. Incentive

alo!t
30. 11alian
city
31. Enroll
36. Callday
(2wds.J
37. Pat

devil

I I

F 1(3 UK'E!7 OF
'"S ULLI MAN "" IN

BREAKFOST,
TOO

mark

22. Singer

antenna
27. Cure
29. Gone

32. Luau's

CAPTAIN EASY

LOOKI/ WHAT
I FETCHED HOME
FER SUPPER, MAW ..

trade-

25. Insect

tion

baking
pit
33. Wee

I\IQTIC E THE

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRIS~ ASSN.I

Stritch
12. Property
revenue
16. Destiny
19. April's

29. Backslide

South

-

11. Actress

contrac-

JJtY~lbL!:®IkJ 44 .....,U-' .-J , _

tUM lVU.Yll-411'1&lt;1 - ....,,
(AN tRVU HIM! Hi.'S !'GOOD P'lfU-1.,, Hi. ltA(I-ii!S.
IT!41C.:.&gt; A"T TMIE UNH1i.R$1TY!

,.

Yesterday's Answer

wds.)

was over.

SAFEGUARD
BlATH SOAP
STATIONERY
6 STYlES

(~

u

Ely thought over the open·
ing lead for 10 minutes and
then called for dummy's
queen of hearts. The finesse
succeeded;.Eiy drew trumps;
and claimed.
As he w•s being congratulated, Ely explained that he
decided West was the sort of
player who would try to give
declarer an immediate problem and that the bidding had
marked North with all the
side aces.
If Ely had refused that
finesse he would not ' have
made the slam . Since the
hand occurred in a total·
poin' team match, it looked
like a tremendous swing but
it wasn't. At the other table
North decided to bid seven
notrump and East selected
the jack of hearts as h1s open·
ing lead. Declarer had no BARNEY
problems at all.

("

27. Bombast
28. Muscular

Mfi!.P, ANNII- fHE.Ri WOUI.O
8£ 10':&gt; M\IC .. Pu&amp;LICif'l' t

.......

HECK'S REG. 79e

·.~

ASSORTED

I make ends meet by sewing all the family clothes, canning our
garden produce, etc. The most important thing is knowing we
have much love to offer a very special child.
She further stated thai agencies are prejudiced. How wrong
she is 1 They want flle best for flleir children. - LYNDA L.

"NO RESPONSE . TilE

The late Ely Culbertson
was not only the first great
contract authority, he was
also one of the keenest psychologists on problems of
play.
His jump to seven spades
was based on lhe fact that he
was playing the Culbertson
four notrump. In this conven·
lion a four notrump bid
_
. showed either three aces or IINNIE wiNKLE •
two aces plus the king of a bid
suit. Ely was looking at the
ace and king of spades so he ~ .JANIE, OIN ea'&gt;IE OF
knew that his partner held lHE~E OLD 5KETCH~
BE lHRCWN OUT ?
the other three aces.
West, one of the top players
of that day, led the seven of
hearts as soon as the bidding

General benefits will come , not
only fu you , but to your family
as well.

hel

llLL

IUT W!. NIID HE.LI", t.O TAIC'f.
1Hl· MAP 1\1'10 (iO TO htl
HO,..l Of MY OLO fli. IINO ,
PROFI,,OR VIRGIL SIN"'fl-ttiM ...

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT..

I

SOCIABLE

oz.

2roRS100

SJOO

TAURUS (April 20 • May 20)
Conditions thai contribute to
your material security are
perking up a bit at present.
Some delay that hampered you
will be overcome.
GEMINI (May 21-Juoe 20)
There are necessary things you
should do at this time, but for
some reason known only to
you, you're dragging your feet.
Get going.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) A
friend requires your help but
would be embarrassed if others
knew of it. Do whal you can,
but do it secretly.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Don't be
hesitant about calling on one
you've done a favor for in the
past to assist you with your
goals at this time. He'll be glad
you asked.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 221
Patience and planning should
be your key words at this time.

Both vulnerable

West

will

preva il this year where your
shared interests are involved.

~

4943

PETAL GREEN
DIJERGENT
· l .I QUID

FAVOR

elsewhere.

Prematw-e action, improperly
fllought out, will gain you only
lemporary success.
LIBRA ISept. 23-0ct. 23) You
by THOMAS JOSEPH
may be entitled to more of a
38. Euphoric
ACROSS
tax break than you're taking on
39. Skin con·
l. Maine
dillon
an investment. Check into il
river
40.
Some
5.
Symbol
further.
n
.
Abide
of
Ari
es
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) A
DOWN
8. Love
proposition you will be offered
1. Ointment
(Sp .)
2. Violently
has some hidden advantages
9. A
3. Bela
Dicken s'
fllat you aren 't fully aware of.
Lugosi
Twist
It's worth investigating.
role
13. Praise
SAGITIARIOUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 14. Dodder(2 wds.)
21) Don ' t try to tackle
4. Military
ing
supplies
something today on your own 15.-rosC
(abbr.)
fllat you don't know enough 16. Tree ·
5.
"'Barber
about. Get the assistance of one 17. Miss
of Sevltle"
Fa bray,
who does.
heroine
to
6. Watchful
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan 19 I
some
1. Marie
18. Contest
Your creativity is crying out
Dressler
joiner
for some form of expression.
role
20. TownsWhy not start that hobby
10.
Big name
man
you've been thinking about 21. - pracin horror
films
lately 1
essing
(2 wds.)
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 191 22. "Leaping
-"
Somehow all the fllings you
23. Famed
planned to do around flle house
Tommy
won't get done tnday. Too bad,
Dorsey
recording
tomorrow you'll even feel less
25.
Quiz-show
like doing them.
group
PISCES (Feb, 21).March 20) 26. even

UICK TRACY

Opening lead- •7

32

ARIES I March 21-April 19)
Conmntrale your efforts today
on mailers that have an effect
on your finances, even through
your inlerest• will direct you

ANN It;

I DON'T w.:!NT TO ~1!1K Tr:LLINCa
'THE POLICE. lf\DOVT Tlf£ TlllASUIU

fav orable conditions

Helen Bottel

'8+6

$1 OO

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG. TO $1.79

21

of securi ty. This is a g&lt;XKI day
to start.
YOUR BIRTHDAY
February 27, 1974 - More

· · . ·..· .·: · .
, . ·. : . ·. ·'·.··· . ··,· ...

10:30 - Day At Night 33.

Ely solved instant problem

FOR

BAB-0
CLEANER

$100
CHOICE
EA(H

89~

HECK'S REG.

7:00 - Beat the Clock 4; What's My Line 8; News 6, 10 ; Elec. Co.
20; Truth or Consequences 3; Let's Make A Deal 13; Spor ts
Desk 15 ; Aviation Weather 33.

A. 1 1/J Bushel

9" TWIN PACK
ROLLER REFILLS
FOR

News 15 ; ABC News 6; Room -222 13.

QTS.

HECK'S REG. 3B' EACH

HARDWARE DEP1.

2

Trails West 15 ; Hogan 's t Heroes 13.
• 6:00 ~ News 8, 10; Sesame Sl . 20 ; ABC News 13 : News 3, 4, 15.
TruthorConseq . 6; Lilias , Yoga - You .33.
6:30 - News 3, 4; CBS News 8, 10; Your Future is Now 33 ; NBC

contribute to your basic sense

. ,

11 : 00 - Wizardof0dds3 , 4, 15 ; GambitS, 10 ; Password 13 ; Mik e

Douglas 6.

You've been thinking about
something you can do that will

•

�'.
\
. ..

.•

. 13 - The Daily

. I

Sent11~·l, Mipdiej&gt;lrl~Ro~:erof.o.', ~:,J·b; 2r.l!W4 • ol'¥1fl·,.~~··rit.~~~M~OS!.'-'*''.!&amp;:,,. .,~,:,~:::&lt;':"&gt;'~::i:':r-:·===-~

0: -: -

Te~.~~· ~~eg ..

6

.WEONES'Ii~.
YrF.t'B.l~ 1,'7~ ;
a,

·
News 3, 4,

oosonality
- &amp;

'· ·.' ·: . . •
io. · 15·;. A·s·!". Ne\'1 1 · 1i:~.Soil~rfle 'st:.20• Per.

Behavioral

dt!Velop"ri1en.f3~.;· ~ru~h· or - ~on~eQ . 4. &gt;.

f ~~~1~1tf;i~~h~o~J~;~~~~FJ.~{~~~is ~~~ 1}i~~~o~:~

OPEl DAllY

7:30 - To Tell the Truth 6 ; Sale of the Century B; The Judge 10 ;
Beat the Clock 13 ; Police Surgeon 3; On the Money 4 ; Antiques 20 ; Episode Action 33; Area Mayor 's Report 9.
8:00 - Sonn\'.1&amp; Cher 8, 10 ; Bill Moyer s' J~Jurnal20 ; Chase 3, 4,
15; Washington Connection 33; The Cowboys -6. 13.
8: JO - Movie "Unwed Father" 6, 13 ; Theater In Am erica 33;
Unquiet Death ol Julius and Ethel Rosenberg 20.
9: 00 - Cannon 10, 8; Movies " The Thomas Crown Affair " 3, 15,
" Coogan's B1uff" 10.

OF FREE

10 TO 9

PARKING

10:00 - Koiak 8, 10 ; News 20 ; Doc Elliott 6, 13.
10:30 - Doy at Night 33.

DISPOSABLE
CIGARElTE:
LIGHTER
.J

11 : 00 - News 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15 ; Janaki 33.
11 : 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; Marilyn Remember ed 6, 13;
Movies " The Five Man Army" B; " The Main Attract ion" 10 .
1: 00 - Tomorrow 4 ; News 13.
2: 00 - News -4.

EVEREADY

TRANSISTOR
BAnERIES

.:.

6:00 -

6: 15 - Ameri ca' s Problem£. 10 .
6: 25 - Farm Report 13. ·
6:30 - Bible Answers 8; Patterns for Living 13; News 6 : F ive
Minutes to Live By 4.

"D" AND " C"

II

60 MIN.
CASSElTE TAPE

LEATHER
MONEY CLIP

REEL&amp; CAN

WATCH
BANDS

HECK'S
REG.

$100

2·0·$100

sug

400FT.

$100

$100

ASSORTED
NYLON

DUAL 8

6:45 -

4:~.$}

Jeff's Collie 6.
8:25 - Jack Lalanne 13 .

FLASH CUBES
$100

HECK'S REG.
29' EA.

8:30 - Brady Bunch 6.
8:55 - News 13.

9: 00 - Paul Dixon 4; AM 3; Ph il Dona hue 15; Abbott &amp; Cos tel lo
8 ; Friendly Junction 10 ; Wild, Wild West 6 ; Biography 33 ;
Movie "Mr. Hobbs Takes A Vacation " 13.
'
9:30- To Tell the Truth 3; Secret Storm 8.

9:55- Chuck White Reports 10.

JEWElRY DEPT.

JEWElRY DEPT.

Farmtime 10 ; Morning Report 3.

7: 00 - Today 3, 4, IS ; News 8, 10; Dick Van Dyke. 13; Pixan ne 6.
7: 30 - Rocky &amp; Bullwinkle 13 ; Ne w Zoo Revue6 .
8:00- - Capt. KangarooS . 10: Sesam e St. 33: New Zoo Revue 13;

SYLVANIA
REGULAR

HICK'S REG. 15' EA.

HECK'S REG. 11.49

HECK'S REG. 11.99

6:35 - Columbus Today 4.

SIZES
AVAILABLE

rn .

THURSDAY, FEB. 28.19i4
Sunrise Sem inar 4 ; Sacred Hea rt 10.

10: 00 - Dinah Shore 3, 15; Joker's WildS, 10; Company6.

10o30 - $10,000 PyramidS, 10 ; Jeopardy 3, 4, 15.

u·~-I.e'P. ... ..IJ. . e. ·1·..p .

: ·: ,

16 oz.

~·· ·· ·

1 ,..,

I -

RAID
ANT

CAP TYPE

&amp;

OIL FILTER

lf&amp;"x 180'

WRENCH

MASKING

88¢

ROLLS$100
FOR

KILLER

8

HICK 'S REG. 41 1 EA.

$100

HECK 'S REG. 28 '

Split Second 6 ; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10; Baffle 3, 15.

1:00 - All My Children 6, l:l; Concentration 8; News 3; Not For
Women Only 15 ; What's My Line? 10.
1:30 - 3 On A Match 3, 4, 15 ; As the World Turns 8, 10; Let's
Make A Deal 6, 13.
2: 00 - Day ~ of Our Lives 3, 4, 15 ; Guiding Light 8, 10 ; Newl ywed

Game 6, 13 .
2:30- Dodors 3, 4, 15; Edge of Night 8, 10; Girl in My Life 6, 13.
3:00 - Masterpiece Theater 20; Another World 3, 4, 15 ; General

Hospital 6,

$1 °~ach

13;

Price Is Right

8,

10.

3:30 - One Life to Live 6, 13 ; Phi l Donahue 4; How to Survive A
Marriage 3, 15 ; Match Game 8, 10.
4:00 - Sesame St. 20, 33 ; Mr. Cartoon - The Banana Splits 3;
Somerset 15 : Speedracer 6; Love, American Sty le 13 ; Movie
" 3: 10 to Yuma" 10.
4:30 - Gilligan's Is. 6, 13 ; Green Acres 3; Bonanza 15; Jackpot
4; Hazel 8.
5:00 - Mister Rogers 20, 33; Andy Gr iffith 8; Mi ss ion lm possible6; Bonanza 3; Merv Griffin 4 ; Gomer Pyle , USMC 13.

HECK'S REG. / 1.39
1

HECK'S REG. $1.48 EA.

AUTOMOTIIIE DEPT.

HARDWARE DEP1.

Pa ssword 6; Bob Braun 's S0-50 Club 4 ; News 8, 10. 13 ;

12:4s- Elec. Co. 33.
12:55 - NBC News 3, 15.

AMBER OR CLEAR
(HOICE

.

Jackpot 3, 15.

12 : 30 -

MALLET

CLEARANCE
LIGHT

JEWElRY
DEPT.

FOR

8. 10.
11 :55- CBS News 8; Dan Imel's World 10.

RUBBER

$100

LIMIT B

11 :30- Brady Bunch 13; Hollywood Squares 3, 4, 15 ; Love of L ife
12 : 00 -

FILM

ROACH

DROP
CLOTH

TAPE

l

HECK'S REG. 11.38

9'x12'
PLASTIC

LARGE

KODAK
CX126-12
KODACOLOR
PRINT

5:30 - Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Beverly Hillbillies 8; Elec. Co. 33 ;

QUART

1"-2" -3"
PAINT BRUSH
SET

PPO
TRANSMISSION
FLUID

SJ_OO
•

FESCO

5

ASTICWARE

HECK'S REG. $1.99

Laundry
Basket
B. Bowl Bru&gt;h
and Hold••
C. 12 Qt. Pail
D. 15 Quart
Dishpan
E. 19 Quart
Wastebasket

.,

7:30 - Hollywood Squares 3; Wild Kingdom 10 ; To Tell the
Truth 6; Ozzle' s Girls 8; Beat the Clock 13 ; Zoom 20; Johnny

WIN AT BRIDGE

.,

NORTH

AUTOMOTIIIEDE1'1.

8

CANS

'AQ43
+AQ87
4AK52
WEST
EAST
.93
.42
'K752
1098
+t0542
+KJ93
4J86
4Ql07
SOUTH IDI
.AKQJt0865

'J

tJ~

• •B~

Throw llown a Losing Hand
Dear Helen :
Every two or three monflls, my husband goes on a binge that
puts us up to our necks in debt.
He takes all our mooey, the car which enables me to get to
work, and gambles until he goes broke. Then he starts selling our
furniture, to buy booze, broads, and a good time.
Afterwards, he ends up at his mother's who gives him what
he needs to finish up, Sometimes she bails him out of jail.
His mother has even stooped so low as to come with him to
our house while I'm working and help him haul off an air conditioner, radio, TV , stereo- things I've booght on my salary. She
gives him the money for them and keeps them at her house.
He is very abusive to me an~ my kids (they aren't. his) .
Besides slapping me around, he accuses me of going out on him,
which I don't.
It's my car, but he won't let me use it except to·go to work . He
won't allow me to have friends or phone calls, but he does
anything he pleases, including calling up his Mama and talking
for about an hoor every night
He won't stay with Alcoholics or Gamblers Anonymous - flle
binges mean too much to him. Besides, with Mama fllere, he
never really has to face up to his problems.
What can I do• I ~mmbled thai my love would change him,
and I - LOST
Dear LOST :
Agood gambler knows when to throw down a losing hand. I'd
pass the deal to Mama and get out of the game! - H.

+++

Dear Helen;
"Thinker" asked why blacks weren't allowed to adopt
handicapped or racially mixed children. They are, and they do '
1 am black single man who recently adopted a little boy I
found in Vietnam. He's dark like me, but his race doesn't matler.
He's my son! - PROUD FATHER
Dear Helen: •
Since we have adopted a black Vietnamese child, have three
natural children, and are currently awaiting the arrival of
another hard-tQ1llace Asian (handicapped) child, I feel I can

ansWer "Thiiiker's" letter.
Her f1rst point was that while families are "w-ged" to adopt
handicapped ormixed.;ace children . Not so! Many people aren't
emotionally capable of raising such children and welfare
workers carefully screen applicants, probably even more
thoroughly fllan ·they do for healthy while babies.
Her secood point was the "affluent" blacks should adopt
them. The amount of money a family makes has little to do with
approval for adoption. Much of our furniture comes from auction
sales or thrift stores. Our car is eight years old. The year OW'
child arrived from Vietllllm, our total annual income was $4,000.
Mann 15; Readi ng for the Classroom Teacher 33 ; Dealer 's
Choice 4.
B: OO - Cheaper One 6. 13 ; Mov ie " Hello, Doll y!" B. 10 ; Behind
the lin es 20, 33 ; Flip Wilson 3, 4, 15.
8: 30 - Firehouse 6, 13.
9: 00 - Ironside 3, 4, 15 ; Kung Fu 6, 13 ; Black Journal 10 ;
WMUL-We Are Your Business 33 .
10 : 00 - News 20 ; What ts Man 33; Str eets of San Fran cisco 6, 13 ;
Music Country USA 3, 4, 15.

11 : 00 - News 13 ; Janaki 33; News 3, 4, 6, 15 .
11 : 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 15, 4; Alan King On Sunset Strip 6, 13,
Mo11ie "The Last Hurrah" 10.
1: 00 - Tomorrow 3, 4; News 13 .
2:00 - News 4

s
.I

WITH
LEMON

I

PISTOL GRIP
HOSE
NOZZLE

$100

POTTING SOIL .

10

HECK'S
REG. Sl,33

$100
HECK'S REG. '1.77

4 QT.

9" PAN
AND ROLLER
SET

17~

North

East

Pass

4N.T

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

-,,.

8

ULTRA
BAN

$100

I

HECK'S REG. $1.99

HOUSEWAREDEPT.

ASSORTED

4

LETTER GALORE
BOXED STATIONERY

2

BOXES$1
FOR

oz.

PLUS4
BOlUS
OUICES

.INUCTOR

BLADES
1 5'5

FOR

HECK'S REG. 31 1 EA.
HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

00

5000

PLUS
PLATINUM

$100
HECK'S REG. $1 .94

HECK'S REG. 99' EA.
/IOt/SEW~RE IJEI'T.

COSMETIC DEPT.

24 oz.
JOHNSON'S

BABY POWDER
HECK'S
REG.
$1 .48

$1 00

.REGULAR
.UNSCENTED
.POWDER

SJOO
HECK'S REG. $1.34

17 OZ. REVLON

BALSAM
SHAMPOO
NORMAL-ONLY

H:~~:s $ -~

00

$1.68

I

COSMET/t DEPT.

·

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words .

34. -Tin-

iCHEKT

o!
luggage
37. Break the

The bidding has been:
West

North

East

Pass

2N.T.

Pass

Tin

1

r)

IMACINA

I

pound
barrier

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:

III

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
A euFWeN ONE:
MIGHT eE.T A &amp;COP
D5AL OUT OF,

ISOPPEO~
V
I I
I;·=:·I=::t:,~=====~-~~-~·=·~
~~~·:•~ted

·=-

IL___!!Ps111=-:'

Jumhl•" LINEA
l' etlerdar'•

by the abon cartoon.

I 0 [ I Xl )
(Aiuwen tomorrowt

THYME

apostrophes, the length and format~on of the word s are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

CRYPTOQUOTES

Now arr&amp;nrelhe clrclod lellen
to form the surprl1e UtJwer, u

AIISW8...

One letter simp ly stands for another . In this sample A is

used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.

CUDGEL

FAULT·Y

TZNAYXR
TGMX

EMX

EQZ

DOOR ISN'T

THE M AU~
LOOI&lt; JU~T LiKE
THE BOJI.I E HEAP
~RUrE

YO U"VE
SEE- tJ . -WHO

ATTACKED ME
1 QN1 6 HT :

-HMM ... NO ONE EVE!?
OFFERED TO TACKLE

7HAT M~~ I;EFORE

DADDY'S TRYIN6 TO MARRY

ON L'i A FOOL
A B ANDON S H 1'5

DECtPED TO FIND
MY C»&gt;N Hl..l~AND,

M'Y5TERY MfJ.N,

MANHCXJD

WHEN FACED
B'/A B IT OF
I

.. RN" FER

?RINCIPA"'S
Office

5lTTIN6 ON THE BENCH

511lf THE PRINCIPAL'S OffiCE
15 NOT 0"~ Df6~ADI N6,
lr'S ALSO 0AN6EROIJS ..

1.

1

You, South, hold:

What do you do now?
have 11 balanced pain''· Don't

try for a slam.

-•"'

'

.•

.....~-;........________

----~ ---'--·--~C---~---"--~~~-.:---..:..-

'•

NAZ

Yl

NAZ

(!C 1~74 Kinr Featu-ru Syndicate,lne.)

LOCI&lt;EOf

PAINTING !&gt; ...

Yl

TZTYQK. - QGHEQYV
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: MONEY IN A FOOL'S HAND EXPOSES HIM WORSE THAN A PlED COAT.-LORD HALIFAX

\ An-e" Certainl11 an eve·open~r!- THE LID

THE &lt;S-E ("fiVE'

AESGNR

ZOYMYTGZR

.A K 7 6 'A K 7 6 U2.K 10 3

,

24. Quadruped

35. Piece

'1:1
South

A-Bid 11iree notrump. You•

Cantrell

23. Incentive

alo!t
30. 11alian
city
31. Enroll
36. Callday
(2wds.J
37. Pat

devil

I I

F 1(3 UK'E!7 OF
'"S ULLI MAN "" IN

BREAKFOST,
TOO

mark

22. Singer

antenna
27. Cure
29. Gone

32. Luau's

CAPTAIN EASY

LOOKI/ WHAT
I FETCHED HOME
FER SUPPER, MAW ..

trade-

25. Insect

tion

baking
pit
33. Wee

I\IQTIC E THE

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRIS~ ASSN.I

Stritch
12. Property
revenue
16. Destiny
19. April's

29. Backslide

South

-

11. Actress

contrac-

JJtY~lbL!:®IkJ 44 .....,U-' .-J , _

tUM lVU.Yll-411'1&lt;1 - ....,,
(AN tRVU HIM! Hi.'S !'GOOD P'lfU-1.,, Hi. ltA(I-ii!S.
IT!41C.:.&gt; A"T TMIE UNH1i.R$1TY!

,.

Yesterday's Answer

wds.)

was over.

SAFEGUARD
BlATH SOAP
STATIONERY
6 STYlES

(~

u

Ely thought over the open·
ing lead for 10 minutes and
then called for dummy's
queen of hearts. The finesse
succeeded;.Eiy drew trumps;
and claimed.
As he w•s being congratulated, Ely explained that he
decided West was the sort of
player who would try to give
declarer an immediate problem and that the bidding had
marked North with all the
side aces.
If Ely had refused that
finesse he would not ' have
made the slam . Since the
hand occurred in a total·
poin' team match, it looked
like a tremendous swing but
it wasn't. At the other table
North decided to bid seven
notrump and East selected
the jack of hearts as h1s open·
ing lead. Declarer had no BARNEY
problems at all.

("

27. Bombast
28. Muscular

Mfi!.P, ANNII- fHE.Ri WOUI.O
8£ 10':&gt; M\IC .. Pu&amp;LICif'l' t

.......

HECK'S REG. 79e

·.~

ASSORTED

I make ends meet by sewing all the family clothes, canning our
garden produce, etc. The most important thing is knowing we
have much love to offer a very special child.
She further stated thai agencies are prejudiced. How wrong
she is 1 They want flle best for flleir children. - LYNDA L.

"NO RESPONSE . TilE

The late Ely Culbertson
was not only the first great
contract authority, he was
also one of the keenest psychologists on problems of
play.
His jump to seven spades
was based on lhe fact that he
was playing the Culbertson
four notrump. In this conven·
lion a four notrump bid
_
. showed either three aces or IINNIE wiNKLE •
two aces plus the king of a bid
suit. Ely was looking at the
ace and king of spades so he ~ .JANIE, OIN ea'&gt;IE OF
knew that his partner held lHE~E OLD 5KETCH~
BE lHRCWN OUT ?
the other three aces.
West, one of the top players
of that day, led the seven of
hearts as soon as the bidding

General benefits will come , not
only fu you , but to your family
as well.

hel

llLL

IUT W!. NIID HE.LI", t.O TAIC'f.
1Hl· MAP 1\1'10 (iO TO htl
HO,..l Of MY OLO fli. IINO ,
PROFI,,OR VIRGIL SIN"'fl-ttiM ...

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT..

I

SOCIABLE

oz.

2roRS100

SJOO

TAURUS (April 20 • May 20)
Conditions thai contribute to
your material security are
perking up a bit at present.
Some delay that hampered you
will be overcome.
GEMINI (May 21-Juoe 20)
There are necessary things you
should do at this time, but for
some reason known only to
you, you're dragging your feet.
Get going.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) A
friend requires your help but
would be embarrassed if others
knew of it. Do whal you can,
but do it secretly.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Don't be
hesitant about calling on one
you've done a favor for in the
past to assist you with your
goals at this time. He'll be glad
you asked.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 221
Patience and planning should
be your key words at this time.

Both vulnerable

West

will

preva il this year where your
shared interests are involved.

~

4943

PETAL GREEN
DIJERGENT
· l .I QUID

FAVOR

elsewhere.

Prematw-e action, improperly
fllought out, will gain you only
lemporary success.
LIBRA ISept. 23-0ct. 23) You
by THOMAS JOSEPH
may be entitled to more of a
38. Euphoric
ACROSS
tax break than you're taking on
39. Skin con·
l. Maine
dillon
an investment. Check into il
river
40.
Some
5.
Symbol
further.
n
.
Abide
of
Ari
es
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) A
DOWN
8. Love
proposition you will be offered
1. Ointment
(Sp .)
2. Violently
has some hidden advantages
9. A
3. Bela
Dicken s'
fllat you aren 't fully aware of.
Lugosi
Twist
It's worth investigating.
role
13. Praise
SAGITIARIOUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 14. Dodder(2 wds.)
21) Don ' t try to tackle
4. Military
ing
supplies
something today on your own 15.-rosC
(abbr.)
fllat you don't know enough 16. Tree ·
5.
"'Barber
about. Get the assistance of one 17. Miss
of Sevltle"
Fa bray,
who does.
heroine
to
6. Watchful
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan 19 I
some
1. Marie
18. Contest
Your creativity is crying out
Dressler
joiner
for some form of expression.
role
20. TownsWhy not start that hobby
10.
Big name
man
you've been thinking about 21. - pracin horror
films
lately 1
essing
(2 wds.)
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 191 22. "Leaping
-"
Somehow all the fllings you
23. Famed
planned to do around flle house
Tommy
won't get done tnday. Too bad,
Dorsey
recording
tomorrow you'll even feel less
25.
Quiz-show
like doing them.
group
PISCES (Feb, 21).March 20) 26. even

UICK TRACY

Opening lead- •7

32

ARIES I March 21-April 19)
Conmntrale your efforts today
on mailers that have an effect
on your finances, even through
your inlerest• will direct you

ANN It;

I DON'T w.:!NT TO ~1!1K Tr:LLINCa
'THE POLICE. lf\DOVT Tlf£ TlllASUIU

fav orable conditions

Helen Bottel

'8+6

$1 OO

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG. TO $1.79

21

of securi ty. This is a g&lt;XKI day
to start.
YOUR BIRTHDAY
February 27, 1974 - More

· · . ·..· .·: · .
, . ·. : . ·. ·'·.··· . ··,· ...

10:30 - Day At Night 33.

Ely solved instant problem

FOR

BAB-0
CLEANER

$100
CHOICE
EA(H

89~

HECK'S REG.

7:00 - Beat the Clock 4; What's My Line 8; News 6, 10 ; Elec. Co.
20; Truth or Consequences 3; Let's Make A Deal 13; Spor ts
Desk 15 ; Aviation Weather 33.

A. 1 1/J Bushel

9" TWIN PACK
ROLLER REFILLS
FOR

News 15 ; ABC News 6; Room -222 13.

QTS.

HECK'S REG. 3B' EACH

HARDWARE DEP1.

2

Trails West 15 ; Hogan 's t Heroes 13.
• 6:00 ~ News 8, 10; Sesame Sl . 20 ; ABC News 13 : News 3, 4, 15.
TruthorConseq . 6; Lilias , Yoga - You .33.
6:30 - News 3, 4; CBS News 8, 10; Your Future is Now 33 ; NBC

contribute to your basic sense

. ,

11 : 00 - Wizardof0dds3 , 4, 15 ; GambitS, 10 ; Password 13 ; Mik e

Douglas 6.

You've been thinking about
something you can do that will

•

�'.

r·
15 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. '!1, !971

14 - The Daily Senhnel, Middleport-Pqmoroy, 0., F'eb. 27, 1974

·Club to sponsor party

Levacy 's honored
-~,

s:\'RACUSE - The home of
.•:ltl'r. and Mrs. Leonard Bass
was

the scene

of a

'fafre~Nell party honoring Gwa

~~~?!~~v i;w~illie
!~

I.evacy who are
soon to Lamont, Iowa .

party was given by the
Primary and Junior Sunday
School classes of the church of
the Nazarene. A valentine
Uleme was carried out in the
decorations.
Games
were
played.
Refreshments of decorated cup

cakes, ice cream and punch
were served . A special' cake
was presented inscribed, "God

ASH WEDNESDAY OBSERVANCE - Miss Erma
Smith, right, chairwoman of the Lenten breat.fast and quiet
hour held this morning at Trinity Church, and her assistant,
Mrs. Ben Neulzling, stand at the improvised altar used at the
service.

Bless You, Gina and Willie".
Gifts and valentines from c:lass
members and a class gift were
presented to each .
Presenting gifts were
Kimberly Imboden, Tony
Imboden, John Frank, Mary
Winebrenner, Melodi Cundiff,
Syracuse; Angie, DeWayne
and David Dowell, Racine; B.

K.

and

Handy

Armes,

Minersville; Lori Stewart,.
Pomeroy; Van, Darla and
Timmy Evans, l.el;lrt; Mr. and
Mrs . Carson

Haye~.

Mrs.

Bernice Levacy, l\lrs. Butch
Armes, Mrs. Leonard Bass,
(Junior Teacher), Mrs. flab
Moore (primary teacher) and
Rev. and Mrs. Larimore.

SALES SET
SYRACUSE - There will be
a Bake Sale and Pie Sale,
Saturday, March 2, at the
Syracuse
First
United
Presbyterian Church Annex at
10 a.m. Each person of the
church is asked to hake for the
sale . All "outside" donations
will be greatly appreciated.
Proceeds will go toward the
purchase of new carpeting for
the church. Place orders by
calling 992-2419, 992-7351 or 9922015.

Young Wives meet

the table also will go to the
Heart Fund.
There will be door and game
prizes and refreshments. For
more information or reservations, call 675--2535.

PT. PLEASANT - The
Monthly Canas ta Club is
sponsoring its fourth annual
Canasta and Bridge party to
benefit the Mason County
Heart Fund March 14 at the
Moose Lodge here beginning at
7 p.m.
Members of the sponsoring
club ere Jo Greathouse, Rose
Wallace, Eva Wallace, Mary
Porter, Phyllis Ferguson,
Edna Thompson, Mary Jo
Robbins and Golda Platt. They
are expecting a bigger turnout
than to previous parties.
Donations of $2 per person
will be accepted, with all
proceeds to be turned over to
the Heart Fund.
An "arts and crafts" table
offered for the nrsl time in 1973
proved so successful it will be
repeated on March H. Local
craftsmen are invited to donate
articles they have made by
calling 67~2535. Proceeds from

VISITS fN CANTON
Mr. and Mrs .. William King
and son, Kevin, • spent the
weekend at Canton visiting
their daughter, Sherry, a
student at Malone College. A
sophomore in the physical
education departinent at
Malone, Miss King plays on the
~asketball team which has a
record of eight wins, two
losses, and goes into the state
tournament at Wooster, F'eb.
28. She is a graduate,of Meigs
High School.

The February meeting of the Karen Young. Others present
Young Wives Club was held at were Mrs. Marilyn Spencer,
the home of Mrs. Ula Van Mrs. Pam Hager, Mrs. Cathy
Meter with Mrs . Sarah Bailey Spencer, Mrs. Esther Mays,
Mrs. Ruth McGrath and Mrs.
as Cl}-hostess,
During the meeting, presided Jeanette Berkley.
Refreshments were served
over by Mrs. Avice Spencer
by
the hostesses. The March
president, plans were made f~
activities at future meetings. meeting will be at the home of
Alayette shower was held for · Mrs. Marilyn Spencer.
Mrs. Mary Swain and the door
prize was awarded to Mrs.
VOWS READ
CANAL WINCHESTER Mr. and Mrs. Walter Lee,
Canal Winchester, announce .
the marriage of their daughter,
Elame Sue, to Edward
Currence, son of Mr, and Mrs.
Jonathon Currence. The double
ring ceremony was performed
by the Rev. Frank Long in the
United Methodist Church, Mill
Creek, W. Va., Feb. 11. The
couple will reside in Middleport.

out of a House-Senate con-

ference committee until it
passed the Senate F'eb. 19 on a
67-32 vote, enough for a two-

WE HAVE GOLD!

thirds vote to override a veto.

.Excellent selection of all types of U.S. Gold
Coins - now in stock.

At his Monday night news
conference, Nixon said he
would veto the bill. He says its
provision for rolling back
gasoline
prices
would
discourage production and
make supplies even more
scarce. He objects to the bill's
formula for energy-related

eBUYING U. S. SILVER COINS - CASH!
2.75 FOR EACH 11.00 IN SILVER

1

eREPEA T OF A SELL..OUT
Yeoman Red Books, Re9. $2.50 EA.
THIS WEEK-$1.88-1 per customer
OPEN TONIGHT6:30-8:30

MTS COINS OF Gallipolis
HOURS:

HOUSEHOLD -HELPERS!

121 Slale St.
In Ohio Valley Laundry Lobby
Phone 446 - 1842

--

S(T IICIYMS:

4CIIJII

30·8 :30

Glassware SPECIALS
Table

accessories

by Anchor Hockm11.

Measuring cups, servmo boWlS and plates,
relish tra'f'!, apothecary jars a'nd more .. . all
at our low. low Big 9 Salt pr ice ol any

2for

S•,.Prlctdl
YOUR CHOICE

twotor99f .

REG .
79c
EACH

• 7-0t. .,.,.. , . S,.,ltaffl Coo*•'

299·

Reg.

$3.49 and
$3,99
Sale Priced
YOUR CHOICE

.... .

1

OUR LOW PRICE

Choice of
or aYOCado

inteno~

99~

BOK OF 24

Crqela CRA1011S

Ctltrlnt

24 do!!erenl color! to
·brogllttn·uP hos or her
color ·book world

!:::~
""'""''I

• Jl!lrlllrtd IIIIOod·Finlrfled Framt1!
o l lovely bru&amp;ll 'tro ke

lambtapes. na·
t t1 11 lila Parl"t lor

OUR LOW PRICE

SPECIAL
Blgt
Only

hoh

REG. $7.99

QUILTU
PILLOW COVERS

Colors

A dotcorelo r 1
liiMar~

lows

Slllalm Slltl

FLATWARE
Klmlworth p1tt•rn .
Suy • compllll Ml II
!lilt lOW

priet

YOUR CHOICE

19~

REG.
45c
EA.

Highly absorbent. 4:V.
l3l1/16-in.al!t.K"P
handy an eround the

2

""""

2 7·

for

011 Cl.

Avocado

•3.99

1ndpun1o

199

REG.OURLOWPRICl

$3.99

--~·

NOW
JUST

_____....... ..... -.

t-= ~~::-:-~~~f--:=~~ F;.....;:::::...:

Fit

lor

abo~•

REG.
49&lt;

5th Avenue

bo~ .

29t

REG.

PANT1 HOSE

EA.

• PtoportiOIIId Slr•tl
Super stretch n~lon ~arn for

Toua~

nylon 11p sta~
sr.arp . Choice ol ink
coiOft.

3·•nch buCb ll lll.lll

cno rct ol

WINTUK
Knitting Worsted

19t

.

Oil WARD•
THEME 1001(1

REG.

s1.21

Orton Aetylft: ... •" the alfv~tnraget
ol wool wllh nona ol lhe d/sachanlagnl

89~

·-ALUMIIIUM
HUSII ROLlERS
Medoum,

lar~ .

OUit tOW PII/Cf

)umbo

or boullant I•ZH. 8 tc
10 fOIIIfl •n p.g.
OUR LOW I'RICI

u""
2

UIIIIOCME®
IWR COLOR 1.111011

Pla1Uc ... Eur lq

REG.

REG. 69'c EA.

for19+

CRACKER JACK"
o.t . packs each with
toylurpr~sa

69+

OUR LOW PRICE

·Jhem

TAKE YOUR PICK!
Hours at fun for any chi ld. Choose
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be furnished by the Sunshine
Makers Class.
A bake sale was set on
Saturday, March 2 at 10 o'clock
at the church annex with
proceeds to go toward the
church carpeting fund. Also
discussed was an ice cream
social for later this summer, as
was a yard sale in the spring
with everyone asked to begin
contributing to the yard sale.
The March meeting will be
the third Thursday with
devotions by Agnes White; the
roll call, "Spring"; Bible study
on Abraham, and the hostesses
will be Beatrice Blake and
Charlotte Nease.
The meeting closed with
prayer by Helen Harris and a
Bible study on Matthew.
Refreshments of coconut
cream'' pie, coffee and coke
were served by the hostesses,
Jean Hall and Janice Lawson,
to Margaret Cottrill, Helen
Diddle, Pauline Morarity,
Agnes White, Helen Harris,
Beatrice Blake, Charlotte
Nease, Mildred Pierce and a
guest, Tina Pierce.

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to serve for the next two years.
They are Judith Matheney,
president; Mrs. Philson, first
vice president; Margaret
Benson, second vice president;
Rosalie Story, secretary;
Esther Maerker, treasurer;
and
Mrs.
Wilson,
parliamentarian.
Mrs. Rachel Warner read a
paper on "Mus ic of Our
Country" prepared by Lee Lee.
Meigs County members
attending besides tho"e named
were Ethel Chapman, Ruth
Euler, Avice Frecker, Mildred
Hawley, Betsy Horky, Geneva
Nolan, Margaret Parsons,
Beatrice Reinhart, Fay Sauer,
Lucille Smith, Mary Virginia
Reibel, Jeanette Thomas,
Anna E. Turner and Ann
Webster.
Next meeting will be a joint
meeting with Bela Alpha,
Alpha Omicron and Delta
Epsilon Chapters in Jackson,
March 8. A dinner meeting will
be at 6:30 p.m. after which
Mrs. Helen Stephenson, state
president, will be the speaker.

59!

• 100%

mothproof, tool

Alpha Omicron Chapter of
Della
Kappa
Gamma,
honorary tteachers' society of
Meigs, Vinton and Jackson
Counties, met lor a luncheon at
the Meigs Inn on Saturday.
Hostesses for the occasion
were Vilma Pikkoja, Martha
Husted, Maxine Philson and
Maxine Whitehead. The tables
were decorated in red and
while and lea lured figurines of
Washington and Lincoln along
with a floral centerpiece which
was sent to Mrs. Theodosia
Frecker who remains ill.
Favors were pens, pads and
packages of salt. Invocation
was given by Mrs. Pikkoja.
Six new members were voted
into membership during the
business session conducted by
Mrs. Roberta Wilson. Anna
Maude Fe~rman announceCl
that Mrs. Geneva Nolan,
Syracuse, is making white
velvet roses for the necrology
service at the State convention,
April 26-28, in Dayton.
Mrs.
Ann
McCarroll
presented the slate of officers

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Mrs. Harry Moore, Mrs.
Gladys Foley, Middleport
Amateur Gardeners. Mrs
Kubn Bend 0 ' the Riv~r- Mr.Grue;er Wildwood G~rde~
Club· Mrs. Kelton Mrs .
Mild;ed Deeth, Mrs'. John
Terrell Mrs. Robert Lewis and
Mrs . 'Thompson, Winding
Trail.

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DECORATE I
I-OZ. MUOS

Mrs. William Willford, Rutland
F'nendly Gardeners; Mrs .
Young, Chester Club; Mrs.
Fred Rlaettnar and . Mrs .
Harold Brown, Pomeroy
Garden Club; Miss Nellie
Zirkl~ Mrs. Etoille Cassell,
Midd1'eport Garden Club; Miss
Phillips, Gallipolis Club; Mrs.
.Jack Robson, Rutland Garden
Club; Mrs. Pearl Reynolds,

SYRACUSE - Devotions
from "These Days" followed
by prayer by Beatrice Blake
opened the meeting of the
Sunshine Makers Class of the
First United Presbyterian
Church in the church annex the
evening of Feb. 21.
The meeting was conducted
by the vice-president, Janice
Lawson. Members answered
roll call by quoting a Bible
verse with the word "heart" in
it. Communications were read
from Mrs. Zavitz and Mrs.
John Boyd, and a freewill offering was taken.
The recent soup sale was
declaredasuccess with enough
cleared to purchase a new
refrigerator for the annex.
Charlotte Nease, Mildred
Pierce and Jean Hall purchased the refrigerator.
Th e date of the annual
mother and daughter banquet
was se t for May 8 with the
dinner hour at 6:30 p.m.
followed by a program. Jean
Hall, Margaret Cottrill and
Beatrice Blake were named on
the committee to the banquet.
The meat, rolls and drink will

The All Weal her Coni

Each book
324 &gt;lilg•s Gl fun
color dt5ogns

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:r11111d ~ICTURES

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able. ChOice ol 3 11tractwl!l panerns 1n colors
bright through yean ol rougt1
fhat .

Heavy gauge a)urn&gt; ·
num. no !t•ck Ttl lon II

Colonial Tu-

15. &lt;Tie! W . Georgia 120 -41

who rtoted that redbud and
Douglas fir trees are
available for $5 each. These
be available for pickup from
the Birchfield home in Rutland
April26, from t2noon to 7 p.m.
Orders may be placed with her
now. A report on the program
book was given by Mrs. Reid
Young, and Mrs. Robert
Thompson discussed publicity
books and the organization of
JUniOr c\ubs.
Several reports from county
contact chairpersons in the
region were read by Mrs. Karl
Grueser . Presidents of clubs
ou tlined plans for the year.
Mrs. Robert Kuhn read a poem
"Patience".
Members of the Winding
Trail Garden Club were
hostesses for the meeting and
served coffee, tea , cake, nuts
and homemade candies from a
table decorated with flowers
and candles.
Attending the meeting and
u, e clubs which they
represented were Mrs. Grimm,
Ben.d 0' the River; Mrs.
Russell Cullums, Walk-In
Club; Mrs. Howard Birchfield,

Brirtg Your W'1Ht ro utef

tO-IIICI
FR1 P_.
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APt trf 1QM

IJniled

Spri ng meeting of Region II,
Ohib Assoc~alwo of G~rden
Clubs, was planned dunng a
meeting of regional chairpersons, county contact
representatives, and garden
club presidents at the Grace
Episcopal Parish House,
Pomeroy Sunday.
Mrs. Aaron Kelton, regional
director, presided at the
meeting. The spring regional
meeting Was set for April 27
with the place to be announced
later. Mrs. Frank Christy,
Marietta, will be invited to be
the speaker.
Among those reporting were
Mrs. Bert Grimm, Meigs
County contact chairperson,
who talked on tentative plans
for the Regatta flowet show in
June, and reported on the
Meigs Co unty Christmas
flo.,er show. Mrs·. Gomer
Philips, Gallipolis, commented
on the therapy program at the
Gallipolis State Institute and of
the sunshine work which needs
to be done there.
The OAGC tree sale is in
progress, according to a report
by Mrs. Howard Birchfield,

Sunshine Makers meet

StNICt tor lour.

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Saturday
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_...:,...__

POMEROY

SUPER
Cholc• ot:

and
a
provisiOn
for
congressional veto of his actions.
In other energy-related
developments on Capitol Hill
Tuesday:
- Senate Majority Leader
Mike Mansfield, D-Monl., said
the President does not have to
wail for Congress to pass an
emergency bill and should
order gasoline rationing under
the Korean War Emergency

NEW

Gardeners plan spring meeting

BEN .FRANKLIN®

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Eve. 6:

College Ratings
YORK
(UPIJ The
Press
Internat ional's
Board of Coaches smal l co ll ege
basketba l l rat1ngs with number
o f first place votes and won ·
los! re cords in paren1heses ·
Team
Points
1 Fairmont St . (6) 1'24 '2)
201
2 Ky Wesleyan (5) \18 4)
190
3 UT Challa ( 5) (21 -4)
182
4. Evansvi ll e 15) (18 5)
109
5. Tenn State ( 2) ( 19 -5)
106
0. O ld Domin1on ( 17 Ol
90
7 A l corn A&amp;M (23 -5)
B9
a Ky State (4) (18 4)
83
9 Jackson State (ll ('21 5\
BO
10. Midwestern nex . l (24 JJ 53
11. Morg ~ n Stale ( 11 (20 -4)
47
12. W11tenberg (19 JJ
39
13 . Augustana (Ill) 121 -Jl
36
14. Bentley 117 -4)
27
15 . (Tiel Roanoke (20 .5)
26

WJemployment compensation

Mon., W:ed ., Fri.

Silent meditation on the
theme "Lent is a Time to
Remember" was held in
conjunction with the serving of
the breakfast. The service of
Lenten meditation opened with
quiet music by Mrs. Ben
Neutzling and a prayer in
unison. The group sang "In the
Cross of Christ I Glory".
Mrs. Pearl Mora, Mrs. Neva
Seyfried, and Mrs. Thomas
Young
presented
the
meditation "The Bequest--A
Cross, a Piece of Bread, a
Prayer". Special music was
provided by the Senior Citizens
Chorus, " Hallelujah at the
Cross", directed by Mrs.
Neutzling . with Mrs. Hazel
Thompson at the piano. The
Rev. W. H. Perrin gave the
benediction.
Miss Smith was in charge of
the Ash Wednesday observance with Mrs. Mora
planning
the
program.
Assisting in decorating the
tables were Miss Smith, Mrs.
Neutzling, Mrs. Terrell, Mrs.
Edith Lanning, Mrs. Ella
Smith, Mrs. Seyfried and Mrs.
Clara Karr.

DAUGHTER BORN
SYRACUSE- Mr. and Mrs.
Hubert Stewart, Syracuse,
announce the birth of a
daughter, Denise Michelle,
Feb. 18, 12:47 p.m. at Holzer
Medical Center, weighing 6
lbs.,15'h oz. The Stewarts have
another daughter, Barbara,
age 13. Paternal grandmother
Is Ellen Stewart, 519 U.cust St.,
Middleport ; and maternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
James Escom Blackburn,
Columbus.

The measure, which includes
WASHINGTON (UP!) - ..- a final attempt today to send
House backers of emergene!' the bill' to President Nixon, authority for Nixon to order
·, energy legislation are making despite his promise to veto it. gasoline rationing, was in and

SALE PLANNED
The Pomeroy Fire Departmen t and Emergency SQuad
will hold a rummage sale
beginning at 9:30 a.m. Friday
and Saturday at Pomeroy
Village Hall. On Saturday
morning at 9:30 the combined
chapters of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will conduct a bake
sale for the fire department
and squad. All proceeds from
the two days will go to the
department's building fund.

Breakfast, quiet hour
opens Lenten observance
Approximately 150 women of
20 Meigs County churches
joined this morning for the
annual Lenten breakfast and
quiet hour at Trinity Church,
Pomeroy.
The breakfast and quiet hour
is traditionally held on Ash
Wednesday, the first day of the
pentential season of Lent.
Greeters for the observance,
hosted by the women of Trinity
Church, were Mrs. John
Terrell, Mrs. Oris Ginther and
Mrs. Lawrence Stewart.
They were seated at long
tables covered in white, the
symbol of purity, and
decorated
with
large
styrofoam crosses with lilies at
the base. Green napkins and
purple and green programs
marked with praying hand and
cross replicas completed the
attractively appointed tables.
Miss Erma Smith extended
the welcome to the women
from the Mount Moriah Baptist
Church, Middleport ; the St.
Paul's Lutheran Church,
Pomeroy; the Naomi Baptist
Church, Pomeroy; the Middleport
First
United
Presbyterian Church; the
Minersville United Methodist
Church; the Pomeroy Baptist
Church; the St. John's
Lutheran Church, Pine Grove;
the Forest Run United
Methodist; the Middleport
First Baptist; the Sacred Hearl
Catholic Church; the Syracuse
Presbyterian Church; the
Springs
United
Rock
Methodist; the Pomeroy
United Methodist; the Rutland
United Methodist; the Enterprise United Methodist; the
Heath United Methodist,
Middleport; the Chester United
Methodist; Forest Run Baptist,
and Grace Episcopal Church.

Congress trying again

-- At a Senate committee
hearing. Sens. Henry M.
Jackson,
D-Wash., and
Aljraham Ribicoff, 0-Conn.,
asked ~'cderal Energy Administrator William E. Srnion
why rationing would not b.e
better than long lines at
gasoline stations. Simon said
the lines will be reduced by
perfecting the allocatiOn of
petroleum products, without
the need of rationing.
Jackson said, "I'll say this,
Mr. Simon . We will have to dig
a big bomb shelter for you by
April if the lines are longer ...

...•........••••......

HOGG
&amp;
ZUSPAN
.
MAURIALS CO.
I

-

. MASON, W. VA.

773--5554

Open 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon. thru Fri. Close at noon Saturday

�'.

r·
15 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Feb. '!1, !971

14 - The Daily Senhnel, Middleport-Pqmoroy, 0., F'eb. 27, 1974

·Club to sponsor party

Levacy 's honored
-~,

s:\'RACUSE - The home of
.•:ltl'r. and Mrs. Leonard Bass
was

the scene

of a

'fafre~Nell party honoring Gwa

~~~?!~~v i;w~illie
!~

I.evacy who are
soon to Lamont, Iowa .

party was given by the
Primary and Junior Sunday
School classes of the church of
the Nazarene. A valentine
Uleme was carried out in the
decorations.
Games
were
played.
Refreshments of decorated cup

cakes, ice cream and punch
were served . A special' cake
was presented inscribed, "God

ASH WEDNESDAY OBSERVANCE - Miss Erma
Smith, right, chairwoman of the Lenten breat.fast and quiet
hour held this morning at Trinity Church, and her assistant,
Mrs. Ben Neulzling, stand at the improvised altar used at the
service.

Bless You, Gina and Willie".
Gifts and valentines from c:lass
members and a class gift were
presented to each .
Presenting gifts were
Kimberly Imboden, Tony
Imboden, John Frank, Mary
Winebrenner, Melodi Cundiff,
Syracuse; Angie, DeWayne
and David Dowell, Racine; B.

K.

and

Handy

Armes,

Minersville; Lori Stewart,.
Pomeroy; Van, Darla and
Timmy Evans, l.el;lrt; Mr. and
Mrs . Carson

Haye~.

Mrs.

Bernice Levacy, l\lrs. Butch
Armes, Mrs. Leonard Bass,
(Junior Teacher), Mrs. flab
Moore (primary teacher) and
Rev. and Mrs. Larimore.

SALES SET
SYRACUSE - There will be
a Bake Sale and Pie Sale,
Saturday, March 2, at the
Syracuse
First
United
Presbyterian Church Annex at
10 a.m. Each person of the
church is asked to hake for the
sale . All "outside" donations
will be greatly appreciated.
Proceeds will go toward the
purchase of new carpeting for
the church. Place orders by
calling 992-2419, 992-7351 or 9922015.

Young Wives meet

the table also will go to the
Heart Fund.
There will be door and game
prizes and refreshments. For
more information or reservations, call 675--2535.

PT. PLEASANT - The
Monthly Canas ta Club is
sponsoring its fourth annual
Canasta and Bridge party to
benefit the Mason County
Heart Fund March 14 at the
Moose Lodge here beginning at
7 p.m.
Members of the sponsoring
club ere Jo Greathouse, Rose
Wallace, Eva Wallace, Mary
Porter, Phyllis Ferguson,
Edna Thompson, Mary Jo
Robbins and Golda Platt. They
are expecting a bigger turnout
than to previous parties.
Donations of $2 per person
will be accepted, with all
proceeds to be turned over to
the Heart Fund.
An "arts and crafts" table
offered for the nrsl time in 1973
proved so successful it will be
repeated on March H. Local
craftsmen are invited to donate
articles they have made by
calling 67~2535. Proceeds from

VISITS fN CANTON
Mr. and Mrs .. William King
and son, Kevin, • spent the
weekend at Canton visiting
their daughter, Sherry, a
student at Malone College. A
sophomore in the physical
education departinent at
Malone, Miss King plays on the
~asketball team which has a
record of eight wins, two
losses, and goes into the state
tournament at Wooster, F'eb.
28. She is a graduate,of Meigs
High School.

The February meeting of the Karen Young. Others present
Young Wives Club was held at were Mrs. Marilyn Spencer,
the home of Mrs. Ula Van Mrs. Pam Hager, Mrs. Cathy
Meter with Mrs . Sarah Bailey Spencer, Mrs. Esther Mays,
Mrs. Ruth McGrath and Mrs.
as Cl}-hostess,
During the meeting, presided Jeanette Berkley.
Refreshments were served
over by Mrs. Avice Spencer
by
the hostesses. The March
president, plans were made f~
activities at future meetings. meeting will be at the home of
Alayette shower was held for · Mrs. Marilyn Spencer.
Mrs. Mary Swain and the door
prize was awarded to Mrs.
VOWS READ
CANAL WINCHESTER Mr. and Mrs. Walter Lee,
Canal Winchester, announce .
the marriage of their daughter,
Elame Sue, to Edward
Currence, son of Mr, and Mrs.
Jonathon Currence. The double
ring ceremony was performed
by the Rev. Frank Long in the
United Methodist Church, Mill
Creek, W. Va., Feb. 11. The
couple will reside in Middleport.

out of a House-Senate con-

ference committee until it
passed the Senate F'eb. 19 on a
67-32 vote, enough for a two-

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.Excellent selection of all types of U.S. Gold
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At his Monday night news
conference, Nixon said he
would veto the bill. He says its
provision for rolling back
gasoline
prices
would
discourage production and
make supplies even more
scarce. He objects to the bill's
formula for energy-related

eBUYING U. S. SILVER COINS - CASH!
2.75 FOR EACH 11.00 IN SILVER

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eREPEA T OF A SELL..OUT
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OPEN TONIGHT6:30-8:30

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SALE STARTS FRIDAY MORNING
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be furnished by the Sunshine
Makers Class.
A bake sale was set on
Saturday, March 2 at 10 o'clock
at the church annex with
proceeds to go toward the
church carpeting fund. Also
discussed was an ice cream
social for later this summer, as
was a yard sale in the spring
with everyone asked to begin
contributing to the yard sale.
The March meeting will be
the third Thursday with
devotions by Agnes White; the
roll call, "Spring"; Bible study
on Abraham, and the hostesses
will be Beatrice Blake and
Charlotte Nease.
The meeting closed with
prayer by Helen Harris and a
Bible study on Matthew.
Refreshments of coconut
cream'' pie, coffee and coke
were served by the hostesses,
Jean Hall and Janice Lawson,
to Margaret Cottrill, Helen
Diddle, Pauline Morarity,
Agnes White, Helen Harris,
Beatrice Blake, Charlotte
Nease, Mildred Pierce and a
guest, Tina Pierce.

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t

to serve for the next two years.
They are Judith Matheney,
president; Mrs. Philson, first
vice president; Margaret
Benson, second vice president;
Rosalie Story, secretary;
Esther Maerker, treasurer;
and
Mrs.
Wilson,
parliamentarian.
Mrs. Rachel Warner read a
paper on "Mus ic of Our
Country" prepared by Lee Lee.
Meigs County members
attending besides tho"e named
were Ethel Chapman, Ruth
Euler, Avice Frecker, Mildred
Hawley, Betsy Horky, Geneva
Nolan, Margaret Parsons,
Beatrice Reinhart, Fay Sauer,
Lucille Smith, Mary Virginia
Reibel, Jeanette Thomas,
Anna E. Turner and Ann
Webster.
Next meeting will be a joint
meeting with Bela Alpha,
Alpha Omicron and Delta
Epsilon Chapters in Jackson,
March 8. A dinner meeting will
be at 6:30 p.m. after which
Mrs. Helen Stephenson, state
president, will be the speaker.

59!

• 100%

mothproof, tool

Alpha Omicron Chapter of
Della
Kappa
Gamma,
honorary tteachers' society of
Meigs, Vinton and Jackson
Counties, met lor a luncheon at
the Meigs Inn on Saturday.
Hostesses for the occasion
were Vilma Pikkoja, Martha
Husted, Maxine Philson and
Maxine Whitehead. The tables
were decorated in red and
while and lea lured figurines of
Washington and Lincoln along
with a floral centerpiece which
was sent to Mrs. Theodosia
Frecker who remains ill.
Favors were pens, pads and
packages of salt. Invocation
was given by Mrs. Pikkoja.
Six new members were voted
into membership during the
business session conducted by
Mrs. Roberta Wilson. Anna
Maude Fe~rman announceCl
that Mrs. Geneva Nolan,
Syracuse, is making white
velvet roses for the necrology
service at the State convention,
April 26-28, in Dayton.
Mrs.
Ann
McCarroll
presented the slate of officers

S•u•orled loam tiYtf' o

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Mrs. Harry Moore, Mrs.
Gladys Foley, Middleport
Amateur Gardeners. Mrs
Kubn Bend 0 ' the Riv~r- Mr.Grue;er Wildwood G~rde~
Club· Mrs. Kelton Mrs .
Mild;ed Deeth, Mrs'. John
Terrell Mrs. Robert Lewis and
Mrs . 'Thompson, Winding
Trail.

OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
NIGHTS UNTIL '9

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'FLAIR

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can. DiapenHr

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DECORATE I
I-OZ. MUOS

Mrs. William Willford, Rutland
F'nendly Gardeners; Mrs .
Young, Chester Club; Mrs.
Fred Rlaettnar and . Mrs .
Harold Brown, Pomeroy
Garden Club; Miss Nellie
Zirkl~ Mrs. Etoille Cassell,
Midd1'eport Garden Club; Miss
Phillips, Gallipolis Club; Mrs.
.Jack Robson, Rutland Garden
Club; Mrs. Pearl Reynolds,

SYRACUSE - Devotions
from "These Days" followed
by prayer by Beatrice Blake
opened the meeting of the
Sunshine Makers Class of the
First United Presbyterian
Church in the church annex the
evening of Feb. 21.
The meeting was conducted
by the vice-president, Janice
Lawson. Members answered
roll call by quoting a Bible
verse with the word "heart" in
it. Communications were read
from Mrs. Zavitz and Mrs.
John Boyd, and a freewill offering was taken.
The recent soup sale was
declaredasuccess with enough
cleared to purchase a new
refrigerator for the annex.
Charlotte Nease, Mildred
Pierce and Jean Hall purchased the refrigerator.
Th e date of the annual
mother and daughter banquet
was se t for May 8 with the
dinner hour at 6:30 p.m.
followed by a program. Jean
Hall, Margaret Cottrill and
Beatrice Blake were named on
the committee to the banquet.
The meat, rolls and drink will

The All Weal her Coni

Each book
324 &gt;lilg•s Gl fun
color dt5ogns

9-Vtlt

Sale Starts Friday Morning

Choose !rom our decorator collac·

OUR LOW PRICE

59!

26

24 •48-INCH
:r11111d ~ICTURES

Easy-care Ml!llamlne looks
)ike fragile china bul it's practically unbreak·
able. ChOice ol 3 11tractwl!l panerns 1n colors
bright through yean ol rougt1
fhat .

Heavy gauge a)urn&gt; ·
num. no !t•ck Ttl lon II

Colonial Tu-

15. &lt;Tie! W . Georgia 120 -41

who rtoted that redbud and
Douglas fir trees are
available for $5 each. These
be available for pickup from
the Birchfield home in Rutland
April26, from t2noon to 7 p.m.
Orders may be placed with her
now. A report on the program
book was given by Mrs. Reid
Young, and Mrs. Robert
Thompson discussed publicity
books and the organization of
JUniOr c\ubs.
Several reports from county
contact chairpersons in the
region were read by Mrs. Karl
Grueser . Presidents of clubs
ou tlined plans for the year.
Mrs. Robert Kuhn read a poem
"Patience".
Members of the Winding
Trail Garden Club were
hostesses for the meeting and
served coffee, tea , cake, nuts
and homemade candies from a
table decorated with flowers
and candles.
Attending the meeting and
u, e clubs which they
represented were Mrs. Grimm,
Ben.d 0' the River; Mrs.
Russell Cullums, Walk-In
Club; Mrs. Howard Birchfield,

Brirtg Your W'1Ht ro utef

tO-IIICI
FR1 P_.
~'"'K";"'

APt trf 1QM

IJniled

Spri ng meeting of Region II,
Ohib Assoc~alwo of G~rden
Clubs, was planned dunng a
meeting of regional chairpersons, county contact
representatives, and garden
club presidents at the Grace
Episcopal Parish House,
Pomeroy Sunday.
Mrs. Aaron Kelton, regional
director, presided at the
meeting. The spring regional
meeting Was set for April 27
with the place to be announced
later. Mrs. Frank Christy,
Marietta, will be invited to be
the speaker.
Among those reporting were
Mrs. Bert Grimm, Meigs
County contact chairperson,
who talked on tentative plans
for the Regatta flowet show in
June, and reported on the
Meigs Co unty Christmas
flo.,er show. Mrs·. Gomer
Philips, Gallipolis, commented
on the therapy program at the
Gallipolis State Institute and of
the sunshine work which needs
to be done there.
The OAGC tree sale is in
progress, according to a report
by Mrs. Howard Birchfield,

Sunshine Makers meet

StNICt tor lour.

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Saturday
Afternoon 1: 30·5 :00

_...:,...__

POMEROY

SUPER
Cholc• ot:

and
a
provisiOn
for
congressional veto of his actions.
In other energy-related
developments on Capitol Hill
Tuesday:
- Senate Majority Leader
Mike Mansfield, D-Monl., said
the President does not have to
wail for Congress to pass an
emergency bill and should
order gasoline rationing under
the Korean War Emergency

NEW

Gardeners plan spring meeting

BEN .FRANKLIN®

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Eve. 6:

College Ratings
YORK
(UPIJ The
Press
Internat ional's
Board of Coaches smal l co ll ege
basketba l l rat1ngs with number
o f first place votes and won ·
los! re cords in paren1heses ·
Team
Points
1 Fairmont St . (6) 1'24 '2)
201
2 Ky Wesleyan (5) \18 4)
190
3 UT Challa ( 5) (21 -4)
182
4. Evansvi ll e 15) (18 5)
109
5. Tenn State ( 2) ( 19 -5)
106
0. O ld Domin1on ( 17 Ol
90
7 A l corn A&amp;M (23 -5)
B9
a Ky State (4) (18 4)
83
9 Jackson State (ll ('21 5\
BO
10. Midwestern nex . l (24 JJ 53
11. Morg ~ n Stale ( 11 (20 -4)
47
12. W11tenberg (19 JJ
39
13 . Augustana (Ill) 121 -Jl
36
14. Bentley 117 -4)
27
15 . (Tiel Roanoke (20 .5)
26

WJemployment compensation

Mon., W:ed ., Fri.

Silent meditation on the
theme "Lent is a Time to
Remember" was held in
conjunction with the serving of
the breakfast. The service of
Lenten meditation opened with
quiet music by Mrs. Ben
Neutzling and a prayer in
unison. The group sang "In the
Cross of Christ I Glory".
Mrs. Pearl Mora, Mrs. Neva
Seyfried, and Mrs. Thomas
Young
presented
the
meditation "The Bequest--A
Cross, a Piece of Bread, a
Prayer". Special music was
provided by the Senior Citizens
Chorus, " Hallelujah at the
Cross", directed by Mrs.
Neutzling . with Mrs. Hazel
Thompson at the piano. The
Rev. W. H. Perrin gave the
benediction.
Miss Smith was in charge of
the Ash Wednesday observance with Mrs. Mora
planning
the
program.
Assisting in decorating the
tables were Miss Smith, Mrs.
Neutzling, Mrs. Terrell, Mrs.
Edith Lanning, Mrs. Ella
Smith, Mrs. Seyfried and Mrs.
Clara Karr.

DAUGHTER BORN
SYRACUSE- Mr. and Mrs.
Hubert Stewart, Syracuse,
announce the birth of a
daughter, Denise Michelle,
Feb. 18, 12:47 p.m. at Holzer
Medical Center, weighing 6
lbs.,15'h oz. The Stewarts have
another daughter, Barbara,
age 13. Paternal grandmother
Is Ellen Stewart, 519 U.cust St.,
Middleport ; and maternal
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
James Escom Blackburn,
Columbus.

The measure, which includes
WASHINGTON (UP!) - ..- a final attempt today to send
House backers of emergene!' the bill' to President Nixon, authority for Nixon to order
·, energy legislation are making despite his promise to veto it. gasoline rationing, was in and

SALE PLANNED
The Pomeroy Fire Departmen t and Emergency SQuad
will hold a rummage sale
beginning at 9:30 a.m. Friday
and Saturday at Pomeroy
Village Hall. On Saturday
morning at 9:30 the combined
chapters of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will conduct a bake
sale for the fire department
and squad. All proceeds from
the two days will go to the
department's building fund.

Breakfast, quiet hour
opens Lenten observance
Approximately 150 women of
20 Meigs County churches
joined this morning for the
annual Lenten breakfast and
quiet hour at Trinity Church,
Pomeroy.
The breakfast and quiet hour
is traditionally held on Ash
Wednesday, the first day of the
pentential season of Lent.
Greeters for the observance,
hosted by the women of Trinity
Church, were Mrs. John
Terrell, Mrs. Oris Ginther and
Mrs. Lawrence Stewart.
They were seated at long
tables covered in white, the
symbol of purity, and
decorated
with
large
styrofoam crosses with lilies at
the base. Green napkins and
purple and green programs
marked with praying hand and
cross replicas completed the
attractively appointed tables.
Miss Erma Smith extended
the welcome to the women
from the Mount Moriah Baptist
Church, Middleport ; the St.
Paul's Lutheran Church,
Pomeroy; the Naomi Baptist
Church, Pomeroy; the Middleport
First
United
Presbyterian Church; the
Minersville United Methodist
Church; the Pomeroy Baptist
Church; the St. John's
Lutheran Church, Pine Grove;
the Forest Run United
Methodist; the Middleport
First Baptist; the Sacred Hearl
Catholic Church; the Syracuse
Presbyterian Church; the
Springs
United
Rock
Methodist; the Pomeroy
United Methodist; the Rutland
United Methodist; the Enterprise United Methodist; the
Heath United Methodist,
Middleport; the Chester United
Methodist; Forest Run Baptist,
and Grace Episcopal Church.

Congress trying again

-- At a Senate committee
hearing. Sens. Henry M.
Jackson,
D-Wash., and
Aljraham Ribicoff, 0-Conn.,
asked ~'cderal Energy Administrator William E. Srnion
why rationing would not b.e
better than long lines at
gasoline stations. Simon said
the lines will be reduced by
perfecting the allocatiOn of
petroleum products, without
the need of rationing.
Jackson said, "I'll say this,
Mr. Simon . We will have to dig
a big bomb shelter for you by
April if the lines are longer ...

...•........••••......

HOGG
&amp;
ZUSPAN
.
MAURIALS CO.
I

-

. MASON, W. VA.

773--5554

Open 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Mon. thru Fri. Close at noon Saturday

�•

•
16- The Dail)' Sentiuel, Middlr JXJrt-Pon;croy. 0 .. Fl•b. 27._1974
SALE SET
MI NEJ1SV IL LE The
Forest Run Me thodist Church

~~,....,.-.;.;,:&gt;;.~::::::::~:::::::::::)i::::.-::::::~~

il Social ~l' Art contest set

Cable offering

is having a rummage sa le in

the church baselne nt. March 5,
6 and 7. from 9 a.m. to :! p.m.

new exclusives

PT. PLEASANT - Beginning Monday, March 4, three
and a half additional hours of
progmmming will be available
BROWNS TRADE DA VIS .
CLEVE LAND (UP! I - Ben each wee k night to cable TV
DaVis, a defen sive back with

the Cleveland Browns for the
past six seasons, Tuesday was

traded to the Detroit Lions for
aT) lmdisclosed draft choice.
Davis older sister is Angela
Davis . He came to the Br owns

in 1967 as the club's 17tlJ round
draft pick.

Ringo" slll rring Don Durant.
Operat ion Intrigue off ers
Gene Barry in " Burke's Law" ,
Anne Francis as " Honey We::~ t "

an d Dav id Niven and Gig

subsc ri ber s, acc ording to
PoinTV iew Program Director

Young in ~ ' The Rogues.' '

With Country a nd Western
U.S.A.. Cable will offer the best
of blue grass from the country
music ca pi lll l of the world,
Gera rd explained .
And if you dig drama, you'll
like Superstar Thea tre , which
fea tures top stars in this anthology series.
In Hollywood Oldies, some of
the grea t vintage films will be
seen, with stars like Cha'rli e
Chaplin , Laurel and Hardy , the
Keystone Kops, Marlene
Dietrich, W. C. Fields, Doug
Fairbanks Sr., Lon Chaney Sr. ,
John Barrymore and Rudolph
Valentino.
Then the program is completed with comedy " For the

Paul Gera rd.
••The programs fall into eight
majo r ca tago r ics ." Ge r ard

explained. "We' ll take the ai r
each wee k night at 7 p.m. for a
half-hour of local news and
pubhc affairs. Then, fo r the

r---------· .
MEIGS THEATRE
Wed ne sday &amp; Thurs day
Feb. 27 ·28

NO T OPEN

next three hours, we' ll present

what we feel are top-q uahty,
off-network progra ms.
Under the head ing of The
Underworld, Cable TV wi ll
have selected episodes of "The
Law and Mr . J ones" starring
James Whitm ore. " Richard

Diamond -?riva te Detective''
sta rr ing David J annsen , "The

Ma r ch l -2-3

Corruptors" starring Step hen
McNally and ••The De tec tives"
slllrring Robert Taylor.

TH E TRAIN
ROBBER S

The Gunslin gers will feature
"The P lains ma n' ' sta r ri ng

COMING SOON

·1,1

Whole Family ."

Gerard added that some of
the new programs a re in color .

Mi chae l Ansara . ··slac k All ca n be seen only on ca ble
Sadie" starring Peter Breck, chann e l fiv e and ar e not
" The We s terner" s tari ng currently available to regular
Brian Keith and " J ohn ny broadcas t stations.
No gam es . No g immicks

Just Highest
Interest Rates
In The Area

51f4%
ON PASSBOOK
SAVINGS
per ce nt yea r paid on
Regula r Pa ssbook Sa vi ngs.
No Minimum . Int eres t
from da te of deposit to da t e
51 4

of withdrawal. Int er es t
compounded quarterly.

~MEIGS

~~RANCH
The Athens County
Savinqs a. Loan Co .

296 Second St .

Pomeroy . Ohio
Al l A ccounts Insured To

S20.00U by F S L IC

52 Club has banquet
Recogniti on fo r perfect
Sunday school attendance was
given to 15 persons at the annual "52 Cl ub" banquet held
rece ntly at the Bradf ord
Church of Chris t.

Forrest, Frances Hysell ,
Tammy Blake, Carol Morris,
H. J . Grim, Danny Harrison
and Donna Kay Hysell, two
years; and Nancy Morris and
Phyllis Gilkey, one year.
Recognition was also given
to those who missed only one or
two Sundays during the year.
A gospel film titled " Monkey

P in s were prese nted to
Tressie Hendricks 11 vears

perfe ct a ttendan~e; Becky

Painter, five

years ; Linda

Hysell, Donald Hysell, four
yea rs; Edie Grimm, Diana

Bus in ess ", a discussion o£
ev olution and creation, was

Pain ter, three years; Homer

shown during the evening.

tending the midwinter conferen ce, completed
the
volunteer hospital worker and
field

ser vice

orientation

course. Mrs. Mary Martin of
the Pomeroy American Legion
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post
39, received a 50 hour pin from
Mrs. Lyell Roush, field service
director. Accepting the pin for
Mrs . Martin was Mrs.
Catherine Welsh, Pomeroy.

SALE SHOES
ALL FROM STOCK
Miss America, Connies, Stride Rite,
Dress Shoes, Sports and Clogs.
i

.I

I
.I
,I
i
\

Now 6.00 a pair
or 2 pairs 10.00

C~apman's

Shoes

MAIN ST.

POMEROY.

WEDNESDAY
PO MEROY · MIDDI-.EPORT
Lions Club, Wednesday noon,
Meigs Inn . Business meeting .
OHIO VALLEY Commandery 24, Knights Templar,
slll ted conclave, Wednesday,
7:30· p.m., Pomeroy Masonic

Temple. Special preparation to
be made for ins pection on

March 2.1.
AM E RI CAI-I
Leg ion
Au xi liar y, Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, 6:30 p.m. potluck

each unit select in the grade
divisions of primary (first
through third ); intermediate,
(fourth through sixth ) and
junior high (seventh and
eighth ) one entry per division
to be taken to the distric't
confe rence in Middleport.
This means that a school
with grades one through six
this yea r 's program - visual would have a maximum of six
arts, all mediums ; written entries - two in visual arts,
work including both poetry and two in writte n work, and two in
the District 16 conference of
tho Ohio PTA scheduled for
May 4 in the Meigs .Junior High
School. She is a member of the
Chester PTA.
''Refl ec tions from Sea to
Shining Sea " is the theme of
the cultural arts competition.
Only three categori es of ·
competition are included in

essays ; and music.

All judging in local sc hools is
to be completed before April
dinner with legionnaires as 20. Writte n work and music are
gu ests. Mee ting at 7: 30 p.m. to be sent to Mrs. Eichinger
before that date so that judging
THURSDAY
can be completed prior to the
PRECEPTOR BETA Beta May 4 conference . Winning
Chapter, 7:45p.m. at home of
Eleanor Thomas with Cay entries of visual arts in the
local PTA units Hre to be taken
Cross ~ public relations direc tor
of
Southeastern
Ohio to the conference for judging
on that day. There will be no
Emergency Medical Service as
speaker . Ta ke articles lor county judging as has taken
place in previous years .

auction .

The necessity of ins tilling
early in a child's life a firm
belief in God and country was
stressed by Joe Struble,
speaker at the Thursday night
meeting of the Middleport
Chi!d Conservation League .
Struble, active member of
Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, and Trinity
Church, Pomeroy, was introduced by Mrs . Walter
Morris.
music.
In his talk, Struble stressed
At the district conference, the importance of giving young
"bes t or show" awards in the children the example to follow
three categories in the three by exposing them in the home
grade divisions will be selected to both religious and patriotic
lor state competition in the fall. training. He said it is ImportHowever, at the conference ant for children to become
in addition to the "best of

church organizations to
prepare them to become better
citizens.
During the meeting at the
Columbus 'and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. and presided over
by 'Mrs . John Blaker, a
donation was made to the CCL
scholarship
fund .
The
treasurer reported that state
dues have been paid .
A thank-you note was read
from Mrs. Janette Thomas,
administrator of the Meigs
Conununity School thanking
the League lor staging Christmas and Valentine parties for
the students.
Plans were discussed for a
bowling party later this spring.
show" awards, second and
Refreslunents carried out the
third places will be given in
SHOWER SLATED
patriotic theme of the meeting
each categor y in each division,
HEMLOCK GROVE - A with Mrs. Kenneth Harris,
as well as ribbons to all par- miscellaneous bridal shower Mrs . Harold Blackston and
ticipants.
for Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Well Mrs. John Sebo as hll!!tesses.
will be held Saturday, March 2, Others attending besides those
at 7:30p.m. in the basement of named were Mrs. Louis
the Hemlock Grove Christian Osborne, Mrs. Robert Schmoll
Church. Relatives, friends and and Mrs. Raymond Stewart.
neighbors are invited.

EVANGELISTIC Services
nightly at Forest Run United
Methodist Church, Minersville,
Wednesday through Saturday
at 7:30p.m. Hymn sing Sunday
SYRACUSE- "HHppiness is
2:30p.m. The Rev. Richard E. that inward bliss that grows Teaford was welcomed as a
new member. Different kinds
Jarvis pastor.
abundantly when we share it of craft were shown by several.
FREE CLOTHING Da y at with others , but dies within us Vinyl handbags were cut out by
Salvation Army home, But· when we employ it selfishly," some of the members for the
ternut Ave. , Pomeroy, from 10 was the thought for the day by project of the month under the
a.m. to 12 noon . All area Agnes White when the Third direction of the leaders Janice
Wednesday Homemakers Club Lawson and Jane Teaford.
residents are welcome.
RIVERVIEW Garden Club met recently at the municipal
Enjoying the day were
building.
7:30 p.m. at the Williams Thelma Grueser, Eleanor
President Margaret Cottrill Bohr am, Agnes White, Pauline
Balderson home. Roll call,
make and wear a valentine presided . Fifteen members_ Morarity, Margaret Eichinger,
corsage. Prizes will be award- answered roll call with a Margaret Cottrill, Charlotte
ed . Auction of homemade happen ing during George Nease, Wanda Teaford, Edith
Washingtons era . Devotions Hood, Jane Teaford, Eileen
articles.
by Elean or Bohram, and Clark, Elva Dailey, Mildred
were
FRIDAY
Janice
Lawson read a poem, Pierce, Janice Lawson, Nancy
OHIO VALLEY Chapter,
Adopt-A-Child, Inc., meets at "Entertaining Her Big Sisters Neutzling and guest Cindy
the Episcopal Church Pari sh Beau." Ail rep or ts were ap- Neutzling. A potluck dinner
was enjoyed at noon.
House, Ironton. Rt. 93, fourth proved .
During
the
afternoon
Jane
bldg., on right past the third
traffic light. Signs to direct. 8
p.m.
SHADE RIVER Masonic
Lodge 453, F&amp;AM, annual
Mr. and Mrs . Homer BHxter Anna Marie and Lisa, by Mrs.
inspection, temple, Chester.
entertained
Monday evening Beulah Ewing.
Work in MM degree ; refreshwith
a
party
hon oring their
Guests at the party besides
ments. All master masons
daughter, Anna Marie, on her those named were Brian
invited.
Spencer, John Porter, Robert
WORLD DAY of Prayer, 2 ninth birthday.
Boring , Barbara Grueser,
A
valentine
theme
was
p.m. at the Chester United
Methodist Church. Sponsored carried out in the decorations. Carrie Beth Bearhs, Priscilla
by Church Women United of Games were played with prizes Herdman and Susie Taylor.
Meigs County, Mrs. Campbell going to Connie Romine, Sending gifts were Ken McBarbara Sprague. Mrs. Baxter Cullough and Susan Lightfoot.
Harper, president.
served
cake, ice cream a nd
Visi ling after the party were
POMONA GRANGE , 8 p.m.
Mr.
and Mrs. Tony Taylor and
soft
drinks
from
a
table
cenat the Rock Springs Hall with
family,
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
tered
with
flowers.
Used
in
the
Racine Grange as host.
decorations were soda replica Powell, Mr. and Mrs. Ziba
SATURDAY
arrangements
of carnations, Midkiff and Kyle Allen .
BAKE SALE with proceeds
to
the
Baxter
children,
gifts
to go to the Pomeroy firemen,
starting at 9·30 a.m. Saturday
at Pomeroy village hall.
Sponsored by three chapters of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hudson, Mrs. Velma Taytor, Racine R.
RACINE Fire Department Mr. and Mrs. Gene Hudson and D. , recently visited in
Auxiliary sponsors a bake sale Joy of Racine and Mr. and Mrs. Columbus with Mrs. Doris
at the Racine Food Market, 10 Shelby Pickens and famil y Wilson.
a.m. Those wishing to donate visited with Mr. and Mrs. Allan
Calling at the home of Mrs .
call 949-3471.
Taylor on S1mday.
Dean Brinker on a Sunday
SUNDAY
Mr. and Mrs. George Circle, were Mr. and Mrs. William
JIM'S CAMPER softball Mr. and Mrs. James Circle of Carleton of Ractne. Sheryl
team meets ·2 p.m. at Bob's New Haven, W. Va ., visited LeAnn and Patrick Johnson,
Recreation Center, Mason. All with Mrs. Mary Circle on Racine.
Patrick
spent
old and prospective new Sunday.
Saturday night with Mrs .
members welcome. Call 773Mrs. Blondena Hudson, Mrs. Brinker.
5503.
Dreama Hudson of Racine and

KLAN CANDIDATE
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
dragon of the Ohio Ku Klux
Klan Monday paid a $50 filing
fee to become a write-in candidate for the Democratic guber·
natorial nomination. Dale R.
Reusch , 34, Lodi, had been
ruled off the May 7 primary
ballot by Secretary of State
Ted W. Brown because he collected only 923 valid signatures
out of the l,ooO required.

Homemakers have meet

Carmel News, By the Day

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
Sale! Mens Nylon

Quilt Lined Jackets

REGUL~-~ PRI~E, '11.50

SALE PRICE

•9.49 '
Mens and Boys Department-1st Floor

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

NUTRO LOW FAT

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
"The Store With AHeart
You, WE LIKE"

STOKELY CUT

JOAN OF ARC

\

Right reserved to limit quantities

We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stamps

Prices Effective Feb. 27-Mar. 6
''

Monday Thm Friday

9:00 to 7:00
Saturday 9 to 9
CLOSED SUNDAYS

VALLEY BELL

2% MILK
Meadow Gold

ICE CREAM
SANDWICHES
6 pah

59¢

USDA Choice lb.•
Beef
NOW

TANG ••~~~~G.E. ~~~~ •••••••• ~~~~~~h'!E~ .. 2~~L '1.29
EVAP. MILK •••••••••••••••••••• 4 '1.00
GREEN BEANS •••••••••••••••• 4 '1.00
KIDNEY BEANS ······················~n 29e
8 oz.
S·PAGHEITI DINNER.!~~-~~~~ •• 4 bxs. '1.0
SHORTENING .M.R~-_Y~~!~~- ~~· $i.29
APPLE BUTTER~~~.~~:~. ~s~~z. 394
gallon

__)

CELERY••...•.•••••• ~1: ~u:~h••29 ~
. NS ••••••••••••••••••
lA~~lEswm
lb. 19C
ONIO
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3
lb. 79~
APPLES •REDDELICIOUS
••••••••••••
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cans

303
cans

303

ROAST
lb

Weese, freslunan, have tied lor the honor of "student of the
semester". Twelve candidates nominated by the Student
Councll were evaluated by the teachers. Traci, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Don C. Weese, Racine, was nominated by
freshmen student council for ber work in selling the most
posters in a money raising project working on the freshman
float, and organizing and working at the freshmen bake sale.
Dennis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Marion Hawk, Minersville, was
nominated by senior Student Council for time worked at
senior dances, beiping with the candy project at noon, at
basketball games, as offering help willingly wherever
needed. Candidates were evaluated for leadership,
coo~ration, service, attendance, personality, character and
achievement.
!±

·.• ..-:...::

89~

SLICED
BOLOGNA

lb.

~

lb.

the supply of energy."
The energy bill was approved by the Senate by a
lllargin of more than two to
one, and Sen. Henry M.
.Jackson, D-Wash., its chief .
sponsor, has predicted the
Senate will vote to override the
veto. But the ma rgin of
passage in the House was less
than two to one.
It takes a two-thirds
majorit¥ in each chamber to
override a veto.
Gasoline lines which Nixon
said would get longer under the
disputed legislation were still
long today-$pecially in metropolitan areas-and motorists

•

•

By United Press International

WASHINGTON -HERE IS HOW OHIO Congressmen voted
Wednesday when the House, on a 258-151 roll call, gave final
approval to the Energy Emergency Act. Voting for were 1711
Democrats and 7ll Republicans. Voting against were 52
Democrats and 99 Republicans.
Ohio has sevenpemocrats, 15 RepublicBPB and one vacancy.
Ohio Democrats for: Ashley, Hays, Seiberling, James Stanton,
Stokes, and Yanik. Ohio Democrats not voting : Carney.
Ohio Republicans for: Harsha, Mosher, Regula, J. W.
Stanton and Wahlen. Ohio Republicans against : Ashbrook,
Brown, Clancy, Devine, Guyer, Latta, Miller, Minshall and
Wylie. Ohio Republicans not voting: Powell.
SAN FRANCISCO - THE PEOPLE IN NEED program
today sent trucks loaded with fresh meat, po!lltry and vegetables
to 11 distribution centers in the hope tbat another try at giving
free food to the needy would appease the kidnapers of 26-year-&lt;&gt;ld
Patricia Hearst and convince them to conununicate with her
family again.
The program's administrators made their first attempt last
Thursday, but the groceries were not delivered on time and
pollee came in to break up brawls among those waiting in line for
the food, which was hurled into the crowds. There were complaints that it was of poor quality.
Charles Bates, the FBI official heading the investigation,
said be was not discouraged that the family had not heard from
the SLA since last Thursday, adding at a Tuesday night news
conference outside the Hearst home in nearby Hlllsborough that
he still felt Patricia was alive and well.
COLUMBUS, Ga.- LT. WILLIAM L. Calley Jr., convicted
of murdering 22 civilian Vietnamese at My La!, was freed on
$1 000 bond Weduesday alter telling a federal court be felt he
00:Ud be "useful to society" while his case is being appealed.
Calley indicated at tbe bearing he would continue to live at his Ft.
Beming apartment while attempting to have his conviction
overthrown in civilian courts on constitutional grounds.
The stocky, 30-year-&lt;&gt;ld lieutenant will be free to go anywhere
he wants, however, according to a military spokesman. He has
been confined for nearly three years to his bachelor officers
quarters under guard. Calley ,·the only Army officer convicted in
the My Lai massacre, said be wanted his frioedom so he could
work to have his sentence set aside. He has filed a writ of habeas
corpus in federal court asking tbat his conviction be overturned.

1972. On a per share basis, earnings were $2.60 or 8.3 per cent
higher than the $2.40 recorded during the previous ye¥.
When computed, earnings were $15.1 million or $4.18 per .
share. That was18 per cent over the 1972 figure of $12.8 million or
$3.55 per share. NaUonwide Ufe's groils Income last year was
$198 million, an increase of $17 million. Included were $161
million from premiums and related sources, up $13 million, and
$37 million from investments, up by $5 million:

Weather
Lows tonight in the 308.
Variable cloudiness and a
chance of snow Ourrie~ northeast and party cloudy west
and south portions Friday.
Hlgha in the upper 30111111 40!1.

at

will see prices go up starting
Friday. A :kent increase in
pump prices has been authorized by the energy office, with 2
cents of it slated to go into ·
effect Friday.
"This is a consumer bill. It's
lor the poor people, the little
people, not for the rich," said

the House sponsor of the bill,
Rep. Harley 0. Staggers, DW.Va.
Nixon Monday declared his
intention to veto the legislation.
He has three objections. He
says the price ceilings would
discourage production and dry
up petroleum supplies, and the
oil industry agrees with him on

that . He doesn 't like a
pro vision for congressional
veto of his energy decisions . He
objects to a provision for
unemployment compensation
for persons put out of work by
the energy crisis , saying
joblessness can't be linked that
easily to energy and the matter
should be handled by general
unemployment bills.
In Congress an additional
objection was that the bill's
formula lor a price "rollback"
would in fact allow price in·
creases.

March allocations of gasoline
were expected to be announced
today or Friday by the Federal

Energy Office (FEO).
With emergency suppli es
provided by FEO last week to
26 states, tbere appeared to be
improvement in the struggle to
buy gasoline in some areas .
In the District of Columbia
some service stations began
pumping gasoline around the
clock to dispense their increased February allocation.
New York City motor ists
found some lines less than a
block long. An extra 20 million
gallons reduced lines in Chicago. But in Los Angeles County,
motorists had to walt up to an
hour for a limit of 5 to 6 gallons
of gasoline.

•

enttne

Devoted To The Interest&amp; OJ The Meigs-Mason Area

VOL. XXV ~0- 223

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

G Id

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1974

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

e:

COLUMBUS- RECORD 1973 EARNINGS were announced

POLISH
SAUSAGE

gas lines and would result in
compulsory gasoline rationing
for the country, and that we're
not going to have," Nixon said.
" I shall veto tbat bill," he
declared.
The President called the bill
- given final congressional approval Wedn esda y by th e
House _ "well intentioned,"
but said a provision to roll back
oil prices would cause longe r
instead of shorter gasoline
waiting lines .
" It would be better," Nixon
said, "for the Congress to act
on the proposals we have
before them-some of them for
a very long time- to increase

SOtmiERN ffiGH "SI'UDENTS OF THE SEMESTER"
- Dennis Hawk, senior at Southern High School and Traci

by tbe Nationwij)e Ufe Insurance Co. here Wednesday wi~h
statutorY earnings at $9.4 million, compared with $8.7 million 111

PORK
SHOULDER

-

WASHINGTON (UP!) President Nixon said today
that he would veto an
emergency energy bill passed
by Congress.
He said it would result in
longer gas lines and compu]rory g!'soline rationing _-"and
that, we 're not going to have."
Nixon, speaking to a Young
Republican Leadership conference at the Shoreham Hotel,
said the answer to the nation's
energy problem would be ·to act
on other legislation he had
proposed to increase the
energy supplies.
"The bill passed by the
Congress will ri!Sult in longer

COLUMBUS-RAYMOND LOWRIE, CHIEF of the Division
of Reclamation of the State Natural l,lesources
Department, attacked Wednesday a bill pe!lding in
the Senate which would revise parts of !be state's strip mining
reclamation rules. Lowrie said the bill would "substantially
weaken the current law" which was enacted in 1972.
The bill proposed by Sens. Robert T. Secrest, D-Cambrldge,
and Harry L. Armstrong, R-Logan, would ellminste double
bonding for strip mine opeators, soften penalties for violations of
reclamation rules and ease requirements for operators drafting
reclamation plans before they are licensed. Ohio Reclamation
AssociaUon officials said the bW is necessary to offset dwindling
fuel supplies. 'The association is a coal mine operator lobby
group.

'1.29 )
_

• I

CAIRO - SECRETARY OF STATE HENRY A. Kissinger
arrived in Cairo today after his -latest diplomatic success set the
stage for troop pullback talks between Israel and Syria.
Political sources here said the United States and Egypt,
which severed ties following the 1967 Middle East War, might
agree on tbe restoration of full diplomatic relations during
Kissinger's meetings with President Anwar Sadat.

Waist length jacket ideal for casual or
work wear .
100 Pet. · nylon quilted with Dacron
polyester fiberfill lining.
Sizes smalL medium, large, and extra
large.
Brass zipper closure - fly type overlap
front - snap closure top and bottom - knit cuffs
· oversize patch pockets.
Extra well made.

;

'

Nixon will veto energy hill

COLUMBUS - AGRICIJL~E SECRETARY Earl Butz
Wednesday termed as "pure baloney and demagoguery of the
mll!!t vicious kind" a predicUon by the American Bakers
Association that bread will soon cost $1 a loaf.
Butz, here to address a meeting of the Ohio Farm Bureau
Federation, refuted an association estimate !bat the Russian
wheat deal would result in a nationwide deficit of 23 million
bushels of wheat in the winter crop. "We will not have a deficit,"
said Butz. "In fact, we will have on June 30 a carryover from this
year's crop of 170 million bushels."

ROUND
STEAK
Tender
I

)

involved in school, civic and

Miss Baxter feted

Auxiliary gets award
Mrs . All en Hamp ton,
presiden t of the American
Legion Auxili ary of Lewis
Manley Post 263, was
presented an award for her
hnit which was one or the first
100 units in the Department or
Ohio to reach membership
goal.
Mrs. Hampton, while at-

Calendar!!

The changes in rules as listed
Mrs. Ma x Ei chinger, Rt . 3,
Pomeroy , has been na med by the Ohio PTA cultural arts
cultural arl'i e hariwoman for co mmittees provide that

CCL has meeting,
discusses values

I

RHODES, MAYBE
CLEVELAND (UP!)
Speculation continuted today
on whether former Gov. James
A. Rhodes would be called to
testify before the federal grand
jury investigating the May 4,
1970, shootings at Kent State
university.

hits budget
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen . Barry Goldwater
today )abeled President Nixon 's 1975 budget a
"splurge of extravagance" and warned that it will
seriously hurt Republican candidates this fall .
Goldwater said the $304 billion Nixon budget was
"a political mistake with the gravest kind of overtones" for both the country and the GOP . In a speech
prepared for delivery before the Young Republican
Leadership Conference, Goldwater said the budget
could make "a bad political outlook for the GOP
much worse. "
"If you think our party is in
trouble at this point, I suggest
that you take a shot at
predicting what kind of shape it
will be in if the inflationary
dynamite of a ~ billion
budget is laid at our doorstep,"
he said.
The Arizona Republican said
Nixon has "literally junked all
of his ax-wielding alll!terity
plans for reducing the size and
cost of the federal establish-

ment. "
Goldwater said that Nixon,
" who derided the government's tendency to try to solve
problems by 'throwing money
at them,' is preparing to solve
emerging economic troubles
by throwing money at them."
"If the President's advisers
believe that any progress can

be made toward appeasing Mr .
Nixon's would-be impeachers
by compromising economic

policy, they are badly
mistaken," he said.
Goldwater said that no
matter what economic policies
Nixon pursued, he would still
have enemies opposing him
personally.
"! say to you very firmly
that, as • candidate for reelection and as a senator, I
cannot live with the budget my
President has presented to the
Congress ," he said.
~~It discourges me to see a
Republican administration
suggesting enlargement of a
federal bureaucracy which is
already so bloated that it feeds
upon itself and threatens to
destroy this nation."

ALL ABOARD- Sb: students frtm Southern High School
and one from Meigs wW be traveling to England, France,
Switzerland and Italy this swruner. The trip, an educational
tour, is being sponsored by the Amer!can Institute for
Foreign Study . The group wlllleave June 24 for New York
and return July 9. At New York they will meet other U. S.
students to start the chartered trip . The trip from New York
to England cost $750 which includes meals, lodging , tours,
tips, etc . Taking the trip from Southern will be, front row,l-r,

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Chance of showers Mon·
day. Highs averaging in the
40s In the north and 50s in the
south. Lows at night
averaging in the upper 20s
and 30s.

Laura Hoover
best speller

in junior high

Permit to burn
needed Friday
Permits are required for
burning in rural areas starting
March I and continuing
through May 31 , District
Hanger Victor Bahr said today.
Fires may spread rapidly,
once out of control, this spring
because of the small amount of
snow the past winter,
necessary to compress dead
vegetation, Bahr said.
" II you must burn, contact
your local warden, get a
penni!, read it and burn according to the instructions on
it' ', Bahr said.
No burning is to be done until
after 4 p.m. and such burning
must be attended untll it is out
or is safely covered. Permits
may be obtained from the
following local wardens
without charge, Bahr S.id. In
passing, he said that so far
there have been two fires
caused this winter by electric
fences down on grass and one
·from trash burning.

Meigs County
BEDFORD - Fred

L.

Burson, George Carper, R. V.

Hellman. W. A. King , John
Meeks,

Sargent,

Ri chard

Ernest Wood .
CHESTER -

George C.

Genhelmer, Mary V. Kaut z,

Wayne S. Michael. Vercla N.

Stout, Rexal T. Summerfield,

Ralph Trussell.
COLUMBIA - Reed Jeffers,

Dorsey Jordon .

LEBANON - Ruda Durst.
Clinton E. Johnson, Harold G.
Roush. John R. Setters.
LETART
Th ereon
Johnson, Eula Wolfe.

OLIVE - Paul F. Andrews,
Frank H. Btse. Gordon R.
Coll ins , Vollie D. Conn .. C. Ed.
Humphrey , Willard Pigott .

Glenna J . Sanders, Doyle N .

Smales.

ORANGE - Harold Barnhart. Paul G. Buckley .
Dorothy Robinson , Jam-es R.

Stout.
RUTLAND - Rose Ellen
Carson. Leodetl Davidson, W.
0.

Musser,

Jam e s

Nicholson, Wayne Turner .

W.

SALEM - John F. Colwell,
Jack W. Crisp, Gerald K.
Grate,

Lauren

Hoffman,

Eugene Holliday.
SALISBURY - Nathan P.
Local wardens are:
Biggs. Howard A. Dail ey,
Gattla County - Cheshire Philip Gtobokar.
Twp .. Everett McDaniel , near
SCIPIO - Wayne Chase,
Cheshire, Mor~an -Twp ..
(Continued on page 5)
Kenneth Ward. B1dwel l.

Best advice: don't die

Casket 'consumer' also
caught up by inflation
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
first survey of funeral home
prices ever conducted by the
federal government showed
today that funerals can be
bought for as little as $210 but
the average buyer, because of
price secrecy and lack of
competition, may wind up
paying closer to $2,000.
The survey by the Federal
Trade Commission (FrC) in·
volved 56 funeral homes in the
District of Columbia, but the
agency said the results revealed many of the same
problems laced by consumers
nationwide.
Officials said the FTC Is now
considering whether to conduct
similar surveys in other cities
across the country to stimulate
competition and publici2e prices.
Some of FTC's findings ;

home service, excluding cemetery costs, ranged from $210 to
$900 at individual funeral
homes. But many of the homes
offering them said they had
few takers. Some consumers
are not aware of their
availability and morti cians
don't bother to tell them.
-The expensive funerals are

the same as the cheaper ones,

except tbat a costlier casket is
involved. Most homes offer the
same basic services and the
buyer who thinks he's getting a
11
better" funeral for more
money is probably just buying
a fancier casket.
- The cheapest funerals involve cloth-eovered wood caskets, although some of the
cheapest metal caskets cost
about the same.
- The "average" basic price
- The " cheapest" funeral charged by homes covered in

the survey during 1973 was
$1,137, although it ranged to as
high as $1,830 at one establishment. Most funeral buyers
must pay cemetery costs
beyond the funeral home ex·
penses-'"lmettmes $750-and
this pushed the average total
price up to $1,886.
- Prices for cremations
wbere no viewing of the body is
involved beforehand ranged
from $80 to $485, with the toppriced firm insisting a casket
had to be purchased as welleven though FrC said the law
doesn't require it.
FrC attributed the · wide
price variations to a '1eeble
competitive environment."
But it said competition and
advertising among tbe homes
in the survey has already
picked up since the project was
started.

EM course announced
The Middleport Volunteer
Fire Department's emergency
medical service have begun an
organized course of instruction
to improve local emergency
medical service skills.
Larry Baker of Middleport,

an emergency medical ser-

vices training instructor, has
been obtained to give 60 hours
of instruction to local EM
technicians. Certificates will
be awarded to the men who
successfully complete the

Vision tests explained
Dr. Norbert Compton, optometrist and longtime Uon,
demonstrated
how
eye

venUon in San Francisco ; Zone
meeting to be held at Meigs Inn
on March 12 at 6:30p.m. and a
examinations de tect vision directors' meeting on March 7
irregularities at the noon- at 7 p.m. at the Meigs Inn.
luncheon meeting of the
A note of thanks was exPomeroy-Middleport Lions tended to Ralph Graves lor
Club Wednesday at the Meigs supplying a filing cabinet to the
Inn.
club.
Compton,
using
Wendell
Rebels
supported
Hospital, and 9:46 p.m. to Old
Hoover, president, as his
$750 RECEIVED
US Rt. 33 to assist the Racine
patient, also explained the
ADDIS ABABA (UP!) Of $1300 pledged to the Meigs
squad which was enroute with
a patient when its truck had a Troops guarding Addis Ababa sight conservation program of County Heart Fund Drive as a
flat tire, the Middleport squad today announced their support Lions International, how it result of the radio day held by
taking Bill Cornell, on to Holzer for rebel soldiers in the north works for needy persons, and remote control over WMPO
and began taking over key presented a collection of an- Monday $750 has been
Medical Center.
tique glasses. The members received, Mrs. James Soulsby,
At9 :09 a.m. today Bill Durst, installations in the capital.
approved
payment for glasses co.ehairman of this year's lund
The revolt, stemming from a
a town employee, was working
lor
three
children.
drive reported today. Mrs.
in a ditch at the Riverside pay dispute, has spread to most
President Hoover reported Soulsby asks that pledges be
Apartments when the ditch of Ethiopia's army, navy and
caved in covering him to his air force, bringing the armed these upcoming meetings : sent to the Pomeroy Post.
knees . He was treated ' at the forces to the brink of a lull- district K convention on March master or they will be picked
scale confrontation with 9 and 10; stare convention May up if -contributors will ' phone
scehe.
24-25-26; International Con- 992-2377.
Emperor Haile Selassie. •

E-R unit on the run
The Middleport ER squad
was busy answering five calls
Wednesday and one early
today. They were :
Wednesday _at 2:14p.m., 11&gt;month-old Stacey Bur ns,
Storys Run, to Holzer Medical
Center; 3:06 p.m., Mrs.
Raymond Miller, Hysell Run,
to
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital; 8:09p.m., Lawrence
Harrison, Ash St., to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; 9:20p.m. a
smaD child, Glenna Louise
Johnson, to Veterans Memorial

Laura Hoover, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Hoover,
Pomeroy Route 2, and an
eighth grader, was named
champion speller of the Meigs
Junior High School in Mid·
dleport Wednesday afternoon.
Twenty-three finalists took
part in the competition with
Miss Hoover selected to
represent the school in · the
county event at Eastern High
School on March 14.
Runner-up
was
Mike
Wayland, eighth grader, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Wayland,
Rutland. Mike missed the word
"lethal" which was spelled
correctly by Miss Hoover who
went ahead to spell the next
word, "limber" correctly.
·Seventh grade finalists were
Crystal Engle, Christie Evans,
Sherry Burckett, Toni Pope,
Terri Zirkle, Dollie Rousey,
Jane Ingle, Chris Yeauger,
Beverly Hoffman, Beverly
Grate , Rita Vining, Pam
Willis. Eighth graders in the
contest were Don Tlllis, Tom
Kennedy, Eddie Sanford,
Cathy Howard, Judy Holliday,
Mike Wayland, Denise Garnes,
Miss Hoover, Robin Snowden,
Tam! DeBord , and 'Terry
Robson .
Carla
Saelens
Mrs.
pronounced the words for the
contest and judges were J oan
Corder, Roger Birch and
James Brewington, members
of the faculty.

Vicki Wolfe and Molly Fisher; back row, Kevin Willford,
Loura Tbeiss, Traci Weese, and Greg Bailey, English
teacher at Southern. Also going from Meigs will be Jeannie
Harrison, and from Southern, Becky Harris. Adults accompanying the group will be Mr. and Mrs. Greg Bailey,
Connie and Delton and Mary Fowler. A project related to the
trip is a current safety project, the sale of first aid kits
sponsored by the Institute for Foreign Study.

course. Weekly sessions will be
held of two hours duration on
selected nights.
Baker's services are made

available by the Trade and
Industrial
Vo c a tiona!
Education Service of the State
Department of Education.
The training consists of instruction on opening and
maintaining an airway, giving
pO!!itive pressure ventilation,
cardiac resuscitation, con -

trollin g of hemorrhage,
treatment of shock , immobilization of fractures,
bandaging, emergency child
birth, care of poison and burn
patients, and others.
Presently, the Middleport
department is conducling a
fund drive to purchase a new
emergency ambulance vehicle.
Firemen hope to wrap up the
$15,000 drive within the next
lew days. Contributions may
.be left at the fire station or
mailed to the department at
PO Box 144, Middleport.
COFCTOMEET
The Middleporl Chamber of
Conunerce will meet Friday at
7:30 p.m. at the Citizen's
National Bank. All inembers
are urged to attend.
'

•

''

.,
I

I

~·

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